It even gets stranger when he does the Pepsi - Coca Cola analogy. I mean, hello? Pepsi isn't meant to mimic Coca Cola (well maybe remotely the same direction), nor does it taste like it... the whole article is a bit weird IMO. Or let's just say, it doesn't fit into this topic's context. As i wrote, this is about digital technology which is meant to mimic analog technology as close as possible. Not offer something which is kind of related.IncarnateX wrote:Yes. Strange intro that does not rhyme with the rest of the article at all.chk071 wrote:Isn't this quite failing the point?Asking which is "better", analog or digital, is a false dichotomy, it is exactly the same as asking whether a Fender Rhodes is better than a Yamaha DX7. Like both legendary keyboards, analog and digital recording media have their merits and demerits, each has a particular character, and it is up to the artist and audio engineer to decide which character best suits the needs of the project at hand.
It's not about being better or worse. It's about being similar.beely wrote:It makes perfect sense in the context of the paragraph - the point it's making is that the concept of "better" is entirely dependent on what you are trying to do. Ie it's using the Rhodes/DX7 analogy to illustrate the concept of better, not to compare it to analog/digital. And then it says that like those two things, analog and digital both have merits and demerits that can mean one is more appropriate to use for a given task than another.IncarnateX wrote:Yes. Strange intro that does not rhyme with the rest of the article at all.chk071 wrote:Isn't this quite failing the point?Asking which is "better", analog or digital, is a false dichotomy, it is exactly the same as asking whether a Fender Rhodes is better than a Yamaha DX7. Like both legendary keyboards, analog and digital recording media have their merits and demerits, each has a particular character, and it is up to the artist and audio engineer to decide which character best suits the needs of the project at hand.
