Sennheiser PC37X randomly goes bad after disconnecting the cable ?
Greetings, Yesterday I was using my headset like normal with my macbook, just listening to music and on a call with people like usual, and the headset was perfectly fine. The stock wire that came with the headset is extremely long and yesterday it annoyed me very much that it kept getting tangled with itself, so I decided to see if the cable is replaceable. I pulled out the cable from the headset and saw the adapter, and looked online for a replacement. Upon plugging it back in, the audio sounded extremely muffled and washed out. Im not sure what I did wrong to make it mess up like that as I've always taken good care of it, ive had it for about 2 years and its always just been chilling on my desk, but anywho I thought the cable just went bad and ordered a replacement. The replacement came, and the issue is still persistant, so I am not sure what the issue is I've tried multiple different headsets and the issue is not with the port, and I also tried it with my windows laptop and...
Apr 23, 2024
One complication with CDs these days is that they're not necessarily authoritative. I had to dig for this, but I found a source: http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=678549
The gist of the message behind the link above is that certain music, when you order from Amazon, will be burned onto CD on-demand instead of shipped as an official, original pressing: "CD-R Note: This product is manufactured on demand when ordered from Amazon.com"
Which raises the question, burned from what source? If Amazon is ripping to MP3, then re-burning that to CD then they've thrown away musical information and you're not getting the lossless 16/44.1 material. Even if that's not what they're doing, they're not forthcoming about what their process is or whether their on-demand CDs contain the full original authoritative audio files, so the only safe assumption is that they do not.
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CDs are not without some issues, though--physical media takes up space, and it can deteriorate (scratches, etc). To get past those issues, I use an app called dBpoweramp (https://www.dbpoweramp.com/) to do bit-perfect rips of my CDs (a whole topic of its own), then I archive the discs in CD boxes (e.g., https://www.uline.com/BL_8559/CD-DVD-Storage-Box).
My flow with dBpoweramp simultaneously rips to uncompressed FLAC (archival copy) and several other formats; it dumps everything to a NAS. The bit-perfect rip process ensures I get an exact copy of the music off of the CDs (e.g., no clicks or glitches), which I only need to do once. Forever after I can use the FLAC archive to regenerate all the other formats, which I've done on occasion when I needed to fix metadata errors, etc.
So at the end of the day, I'm all about listening to digital music files via computer (through a nice external DAC). But I still get to that end result more often than not by buying CDs and doing my own careful extraction to lossless file formats.