The Shure KSE 1500 Electrostatic Earphone System ($2,999.00 USD) is all-right, but you would want something useful in your ear at a concert.
Something that looks identical, but works exactly the opposite. (Like a Whisky flask that pours in as opposed to out). This is called in technology, reverse-engineering.
What about the noise floor?
107 dB is all-right for mobile use.
The noise level in a room is typically ...
130 db is good in the studio.
The best DAC (ADC, LavryGold AD122-96) is 0.00005% THD for signals lower than -40 dBf.
After review, a 64-bit noise floor (385.32 dB) is sufficient.
This way, using this number, you can at least record the economy of the world, to handle inflation (in quintilian), up and down, on a day to day basis.
In economics, a quant is a quantitative analyst of repute on wall street.
In music, a quint is a bass variant of a sackbut (Eb).
To be a praetor of economics, Michael Preatorius developed a flat sackbut.
As fat women are prone to strap water to their bodies, we may say that the Shure KSE 1500 Electrostatic Earphone System ($2,999.00 USD) may be the ideal treadmill jogging system. It would be great if it played some
JP 2016/11/25
www.hifiart.ca
No comments:
Post a Comment