Yes, it's of real value to those who want to develop better sounding systems.jesuscheung wrote:sorry guys. i don't understand the point of measurement.... if a complete and sound measurement exists, then every DAC on earth would have been ranked mathematically.
the fun of hifi is listening. why reason it with measurements? coz our ears aren't reliable? if so, why bother with hifi...
sorry to spoil the fun. i guess there is a point. programming compiler have well-defined test cases. yet player compiled by newer compiler seems to produce better SQ. yet, compiler's test cases weren't goal for better SQ, but for better performance and stability.
also, when you start to measure 'cache misses', i feel that you are intercepting, hence damages SQ, hence the measurement is not the true MQn audio output. it is like a firewall intercepting every packet going in and out of your computer.
It's also of value to try & take the guess work out of developing better playback software.
As we have seen, not all new versions of MQN have sounded better than previous versions.
It would be much more efficient to progress if we could determine what measurable aspects of the processing correlate to what audible aspects of the sound. What determines the bass, treble, soundstage, etc.
It also might lead to new & interesting approaches to audio playback as well as being of inherent interest to some of us, anyway.
I agree that the ears are the determining factor but there still is some disagreement about what the best player is so it's not always clear cut.
I agree also that measuring cache misses will possibly interfere with the processor load & skew results. It's not so much that SQ will be affected as we can listen to SQ without the cache testing program being active.