Rickster71 (01-10-2009)
admin should be listened to
Happy New Year Audioholics! It’s a brand new year and with it comes new announcements from the tech industry. From Macworld to CES we’re in the midst of a bombardment of new cool stuff to buy. But this January finds us in the midst of one of the biggest economic slowdowns since the early 80s. Does a bleak economic outlook curtail your enthusiasm for the latest gadget?
Discuss "Electronics in a Bad Economy" here. Read the article.
Rickster71 (01-10-2009)
Great article Wayde!
I hope this cyclical economic downturn encourages more downward pressure on prices.
Most MSRP's are ridiculous.
Wayde Robson (01-10-2009)
tattoo_Dan should be listened to
no,this economy doesn't slow me down on "new" gadgets ,I rationalize spending $$$ on my HT by saying that it's cheaper and I will conserve more $$$ by staying home and watching dvd's here,etc,etc,
or at least don't you think that sounds good if I use that one on my wife ?
LOL![]()
Totally agree Tat-man. That's the idea that got me going here... Some stuff has long term economic benefits. Good (but not esoteric) home theater gear will pay for itself many times over. If you can turn renting a movie and staying home into an event that rivals going out and spending money at the movies and/or bar etc. I believe you've saved quite a bit of money in the long run.
As for a portable dancing dog/iPod radio... Not so much.
There is a good side to the bad economy. I see used audio gear going for many times less than list price and some stuff is just a steal. Ive never bought a new peice of AV equipment. But the used market is filled with people that need money to pay the bills and wont mind letting a $2000 MSRP speaker go for $150.
Reciever: Yamaha AX-592 Speakers: Bang & Olufsen BeoLab Penta 2, Velodyne DF-661 mini-monitors (broken) Subwoofer: Paradigm PDR-10 Cable: Monster Z series Source: Late '08 Apple MacBook Pro, 2.8Ghz, 4GB RAM, 320GB HD Operating System: Mac OS X, Fedora Linux V.9, Audacious + FLAC, high bitrate MP3's. Room: 122x133 inches
Headphones: Alessandro MS-1, Etymotic HF-2
Next desired upgrade: Acoustic room treatment or receiver upgrade.
I agree that there have been lots of dumb products, and lots of gadgets simply aren't neccessary.
But, a SmartPhone has been great for business. I can check my e-mail on the road, messaging is much easier with a QUERTY keyboard... finding an address or the weather using a phone is much easier than those outdated wastes called phone books or turning on the weather channel in a hotel and waiting for them to get to your area.
Why would anyone want to watch a movie on their knee? Obviously you don't travel much. If they have a movie at all, it sucks.
You'd rather use a map then a GPS?! That's rediculous. A GPS is a map, you don't need to put in a destination, my car has the entire US map on one disc. If I need to find a gas station, hotel, resturant, or a hidden address, its nice to be able to get instant directions. Pull over to view a map? That reminds me of when I was a kid and you'd see people swerving all over reading a map or putting their brakes on to pull over to read their mess of a map. Or a young girl makes a wrong turn and ends up in a bad area, what's she going to do, buy a map at the gas station? That's safe.I'm not saying maps aren't useful, but, saying a GPS isn't is crazy. Maybe if you travel the same places all the time it isn't, but then just don't buy it.
Also CES is dead this year, so, its already on that road.
mediaholic is a forum member in good standing
There is no question (in my opinion) that the economy will affect the average consumer, thus preventing them from buying such gadgets. I have a feeling from reading around this forum that the average consumer is in the minority on this forum.
tattoo_Dan should be listened to
fredk should be listened to
What a load of self serving industry drivel!!“Technology has become a necessity. It is not a luxury anymore…”
Food is a necessity. No food, you die. I have gone 5 years without a cellphone and show no signs of imminent death. Now, if I were still in sales, I would have 'died' a thousand deaths of lost commisions, but thats another story.
The cable TV thing? 3 years, no cable. Not dead. In fact, I noticed a rather interesting thing: no consumer angst. Since I am no longer bombarded by a constant barrage of adds telling me I absolutely have to buy all these 'necessities' I have stopped worrying about all the stuff I don't have. I have lost my desire to constantly over consume. No Ipod doggies for me!
It would be nice if the recession reduced E-waste, but really, if phone companies provided cell phones that don't 'expire' after a year or two, we would have way less E-waste in any economy.
What drivel!!!
Fred
"Given time, we can come to believe that many different variations on the truth are apparently equally entertaining." - Floyd E. Toole
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Axiom M80 mains, Qs8 surrounds, dual M2 centers, EP350 sub, Sony 50A2020 display, Denon 2808 AVR
Thanks for the comments Midnight.
The bit about Smartphones in the article was about teenagers using them.
I agree they're great for business and some people might have need for all the utilities, there's no denying it.
I think you misunderstand. I'm not trying to say we need to do without electronics or that nobody should have them or trying to determine which is better a map or a GPS.
I am just saying that if you have limited budget we have to make decisions that we're going to do without some, it's a personal of choice. A study concluded that GPS systems and Smartphones are two of the first to go.
I wish language had an efficient way to negate every possible misinterpretation of what you've written. Merely omitting what you didn't say is apparently not enough.