Question
Alright, so I've been trying to become involved in the high-definition era for a few years now. As far as I'm concerned, picking the right cables can be controversial. Whenever you go buy a new HDTV or an accessory component, the salesmen always ask if you have the appropriate connections. Then they always ask if you have "the best" connections that will provide the optimal picture and sound. So is there? Is a $15 cable going to provide equivalent performance to a $100 cable of the same type? And does this question have a different answer for analog and digital cables? I'd love to get the facts straight once and for all. Thanks! --Submitted by Derek M.
Answer
A good salesperson should ask you questions that produce the best choices for you that will allow your system to function at its highest performance level within your price range and living environment. In this busy world we live in, the sales interview is too time consuming to take place properly and the more common practice is the buyer finds the components/system at the best price and buys at the location of convenience with the understanding that the some system of cabling is included or in the case that no cabling is included the cheapest cabling available is bought to just make sure the system works.
After the components/system has been found to be functional the fine tuning of its performance becomes a consumer need, usually brought on by ads and a nagging feeling of having missed something along the way (what are all the connections on the back for). One of the areas that a consumer can upgrade at the component or system level is the cabling, just due to the fact that cabling doesn’t require a great deals of skill and tools. The industry/marketplace answers the need by providing cabling at various price levels. Once the marketplace has enough statistics a comfort price range is established usually incorporating, low end, good, and high end with very little reflection on true quality.
The final point, is your satisfaction. With most reliable vendors, you can buy what you want with the understanding you can and will return items your are unsatisfied with. So the next time you are faced with a salesperson asking the question “do you have "the best" connections that will provide the optimal picture and sound?” listen and then tell them you will take both with the understanding that you will return what is unsatisfactory. Take the purchases home and see what you think and based on that return what you don’t like. When you are using your components/system you are using your analog receptor systems that you were born with. The components/system is passing the signal through an analog medium (the speaker and display) so you can experience it as a reproduction of the original media. The only time digital comes into play is when the reproduction of the original media requires conversion from digital to analog to allow you to experience it. Until we can be equipped with digital input jacks you should not worry yourself about the shape and size of ones and zeros.
Am I the only one that can't follow bus's answer?
Indeed you're not the only one!
I think that whatever sense may have been in bus's answer was totally lost in his inabillity to string proper grammar together. I'm in no way a pedant but it does help to at least say what you mean!
But does that matter? He's winning in the poll ...... <eom>
Of course it matters! Look at politicians. There's always one who wins the poll and you can bet your sweet ass it's always the one with no brains...and I in no way mean to say that bus is without brains!
Particularly with long posts, readers won't read all the posts to the end and will stop at the first one (or so) that they agree with.
In short, the longer the posts, the more likely the first choice will get the most votes.
I agree with the previous responses. I thought his answer was the least informative.
I just wanted to read all of the answers and clicked the first one in the email, which simply said "answer by bus". I ended up voting for an answer I never read. If the hyperlinks said "Vote for [name's] answer" I'll bet there would be a difference in the poll results.
Personally I would just put voting hyperlinks near the full answer, so you can't accidentally vote for one you never read.
Bus must be that guy that sells you those highly expensive cables.
Not only it did not make sense, it is NOT USABLE as well... He states, as with many vendors, you can take items u r not happy back...
You will take wires from the within walls, make a mess, and run new cables? How about just rebuilding your house, once u r at it? The question is a smart one, the answer is NOT! The decision MUST BE MADE PRIOR to purchase, since then it will be too late (After installation)
It makes sense, again, it makes great sense to buy several types of cables and see which ones your "eyes and ears" like best". Then, of course, make sure you can take the ones you do not like back to the store for a full refund. Simple, I don't see the hang up.
Great note to remember: If any store will refund you a full refund for any product you are not satisfied with, then by all means buy multiple items and test them all -- after which you can take back the ones that do not work to your satisfaction! Simple.
It all makes simple sense, let us not get complex here.
It's simple like you said, but the difference between your answer and the other guy up there is the time it took to say what you said! You basically said what he said in 2 little paragraphs. It took him 4 paragraphs and a lot of useless babbling to answer a question! So, thats what all the hang up is all about. Keeping whats simple, SIMPLE!
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