On Tue, 2006-06-27 at 06:08 -0700, Mark Price wrote: > Us old guys with high frequency hearing loss don't notice much if you > record at the highest resolution [or whatever they call it!]. I > personally don't have the patience to do more than burn some mix CDs > from windows media! My kids have their desktops jammed with stuff and > MP3 players, one has an IPOD. It's all status symbol crap. But kinda > neat in it's own way. My Sony head unit in the American has an IPOD > input, never tried to use it. The Cd changer in the Cherokee has MP3 > disc capability times 12 discs, never tried to do it either! Just to > d@mn#d! old and grouchy! Probably right on the mp3 high-freq part. A car is a lousy place to listen to music, also, anything loud enough sounds good! I like old cars mainly for the simplicity. I have to have an intimate relationship with it's workings; that's fine, I like that. But I wanted a sound system that was 100% in line what what makes driving 40 year old cars so good, that brutally stripped down clean functionality mixed with decent (occasionally good) design. Car controls are BIG, pull, push, CLICK; lever move inches, switches click loudly, are made of metal and big plastic, body color or chrome or black. I didn't want a delicate, flimsy, thief-inviting, confetti-colored thing with microscopic fussy little controls. I wanted BIG KNOBS GO CLICK. Cars are body prosthetics, a physical world, not a virtual one. I did get rather carried away with it. It's the sort of stuff I make though, other than cars, and I teach this stuff to grad students, so it's the sort of thing I can pick at and get done over time. (I wish my Rambler was old enough to have a tube AM radio.) _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com