It kind'a wiggleswhyterabbyt wrote:BTW Im passing familiar with pointer aliasing, but can someone explain pointer jitter? Is it harmonic or enharmonic?
just right
It kind'a wiggleswhyterabbyt wrote:BTW Im passing familiar with pointer aliasing, but can someone explain pointer jitter? Is it harmonic or enharmonic?
That's the thing, I'm not claiming I know anything about how they achieve their sound, but I can claim they do it in a smart way, because to me it sounds better than the much worse quality that I know would be possible. That, to me, is smart. Some people seem to have a really hard time accepting that.Urs wrote:Maybe Yamahas indeed sound better in certain ways, but that has probably nothing to do with the synthesis itself. It's rather related to the choice of converters, equalizers etc. And maybe some algorithm works better in fixed point than in floating point. However, there's no use to make up a paradigm from any of this.
Yup. You claimed it, I asked for a reference to it. Is that hard to follow?Shy wrote:whyterabbyt: the only proof you asked me for is for something being smart.
Understand what you want. If what you meant was 'I think its smart', then say so. Dont f**k about like an ignorant tool doing everything you can to avoid admitting you dont actually know one way or the other, and all yu were doing was making assumptions based on a subjective opinion of your own. Especially when you've made the same claim in more than one thread.I guess I'm supposed to understand you want me to go and ask Yamaha developers "hey, tell me, did you shoot in the dark and come up with some fm synth design that's so good sounding with its great aliasing? Or did you do it intelligently?".
Now I know, that would be a very sensible question.
Actually Im enjoying ridiculing you for entirely different reasons.It's obvious you enjoy ridiculing me because you didn't hear anything you liked, so I hope that makes you feel better about yourself now.
You could. By your current debating standards, proof would entail a claim that I am clearly smart because I can sing in tune.Maybe I could ask you something like "prove to me, are you smart?", to be at the same sensibility level.
So if something is better than it possibly could be, then it must be the result of someone making it 'smart'Shy wrote: That's the thing, I'm not claiming I know anything about how they achieve their sound, but I can claim they do it in a smart way, because to me it sounds better than the much worse quality that I know would be possible. That, to me, is smart. Some people seem to have a really hard time accepting that.
how smart are people who make claim that things are smart just because they subjectively rate those things better than they possibly could be?Shy wrote:OK whyterabbyt, I don't even have to ask if you're smart or not, I know you are. Only smart people ask people to prove that something is smart.
'much', 'better', 'possibly' and 'could' are all subjective. hence you make no sense.Shy wrote:No, if it's much better than it possibly could be. Now ask me to prove it.
empirical evidence suggests otherwise.Shy wrote:Very smart. Maybe even smarter than people who ask how smart they are.
I see. People who have opinions don't make sense.whyterabbyt wrote:'much', 'better', 'possibly' and 'could' are all subjective. hence you make no sense.Shy wrote:No, if it's much better than it possibly could be. Now ask me to prove it.
The problem is that you *did* claim that they did somthing *specific* regarding aliasing. You made a specific claim with no evidence to back.Shy wrote:That's the thing, I'm not claiming I know anything about how they achieve their sound, but I can claim they do it in a smart way, because to me it sounds better than the much worse quality that I know would be possible. That, to me, is smart. Some people seem to have a really hard time accepting that.
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