Where is the home theater market heading?

lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
No...
Bryston just measures better, and we all know ADTG LUVS his high SINAD values! :p
Does it? Don't think I've seen much in that regard.....thought it was more about the 20 year warranty and supposed better build accordingly....
 
ryanosaur

ryanosaur

Audioholic Overlord
Does it? Don't think I've seen much in that regard.....thought it was more about the 20 year warranty and supposed better build accordingly....
for awhile at least they were holding the top spot on Amps at ASR. *shrugs
 
ryanosaur

ryanosaur

Audioholic Overlord
Ah!
I must’ve gotten my ‘B’ brands mixed up.
:eek:

*shrugs
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Ah!
I must’ve gotten my ‘B’ brands mixed up.
:eek:

*shrugs
Crossing wires, was just thinking that :) Since I couldn't find a Bryston review there....someone needs to send their damn amp in! :)
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Seriously, I have no life.
More bad news has arrived. Shenzhen, the center of the Chinese electronics industry, has just gone into lockdown, due to Covid-19. Their vaccines are apparently no better than a lot of their electronics. So this will create more disruption. We have to return manufacture to the US and Europe.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Nope. I'm saying when the constraints ease I doubt pricing will ease.
I would like to see prices follow the cost of whatever is being sold, but gasoline clearly doesn't need to adhere to that model- the price started rising weeks ago and since the US has a reserve, there's no way the gas being delivered to the stations came from offshore sources.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
More bad news has arrived. Shenzhen, the center of the Chinese electronics industry, has just gone into lockdown, due to Covid-19. Their vaccines are apparently no better than a lot of their electronics. So this will create more disruption. We have to return manufacture to the US and Europe.
Should have, but consumer demand for lower prices made it hard to do, at best. Parasound, and the other companies run by Richard Schramm, always used Taiwan for the manufacturing base but being in the sights of the CCP, that too will come to an end.

With the number of Americans who don't want to stay in school, I don't have high hopes for a lot of careers and positions in manufacturing. The local (suburb) school board wants a $77.4 Million dollar referendum to pass, so the high school can be renovated & modernized and many comments form people who are debating it come from their feelings but some (including me) are looking at the Reading & Math proficiency as a reason to block some of what is included. They do want to expand & improve the Robotics and STEM programs and I fully support that but the average scores aren't great and I think the school needs to present a more realistic view of the world to the students, especially since Milwaukee still has so many good engineering schools and high tech companies that are expanding here.

One of the Milwaukee Public High Schools shows 6% and 9% proficiency for Math & English, respectively, with 73% graduation rate. That tells me that most of their students can't read well or do the required Math and that's a huge problem- this is a school for 'gifted and talented' students. I suspect the cashier at a sandwich shop attended that school- when I paid for the sandwich, the change due was 40 cents and she couldn't figure out how to do that with the coins in the register.
 
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SithZedi

SithZedi

Audioholic General
Should have, but consumer demand for lower prices made it hard to do, at best. Parasound, and the other companies run by Richard Schramm, always used Taiwan for the manufacturing base but being in the sights of the CCP, that too will come to an end.

With the number of Americans who don't want to stay in school, I don't have high hopes for a lot of careers and positions in manufacturing. The local (suburb) school board wants a $77.4 Million dollar referendum to pass, so the high school can be renovated & modernized and many comments form people who are debating it come from their feelings but some (including me) are looking at the Reading & Math proficiency as a reason to block some of what is included. They do want to expand & improve the Robotics and STEM programs and I fully support that but the average scores aren't great and I think the school needs to present a more realistic view of the world to the students, especially since Milwaukee still has so many good engineering schools and high tech companies that are expanding here.

One of the Milwaukee Public High Schools shows 6% and 9% proficiency for Math & English, respectively, with 73% graduation rate. That tells me that most of their students can't read well or do the required Math and that's a huge problem- this is a school for 'gifted and talented' students. I suspect the cashier at a sandwich shop attended that school- when I paid for the sandwich, the change due was 40 cents and she couldn't figure out how to do that with the coins in the register.
Those proficiency scores are horrible. In NYC, the average is around 47% in English, 45% Math, and a 78% graduation rate. Again that's average, so demographics and neighborhoods move the numbers all over the place.

The Milwaukee numbers match the lower level NYC schools. 140 schools had at least one grade where more than 90 percent of kids could not pass the state exams.

Ultimately, these numbers cannot be compared to rates in prior years since the" tests" have been simplified so many times one is comparing apples to oranges. As usual, the kids lose.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Those proficiency scores are horrible. In NYC, the average is around 47% in English, 45% Math, and a 78% graduation rate. Again that's average, so demographics and neighborhoods move the numbers all over the place.

The Milwaukee numbers match the lower level NYC schools. 140 schools had at least one grade where more than 90 percent of kids could not pass the state exams.

Ultimately, these numbers cannot be compared to rates in prior years since the" tests" have been simplified so many times one is comparing apples to oranges. As usual, the kids lose.
But if the tests are more simple and the kids still can't pass, we're screwed. Well, THEY'RE screwed and we can see it in adults working for years at minimum wage jobs who have graduated high school, some have degrees but those degrees prepared them for exactly NOTHING in the real world. Some just can't get out of their own way, but that's not everyone else's fault.
 
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