kotmj Posted March 31, 2021 Author Report Share Posted March 31, 2021 Visited a project manager (IT infra), currently unemployed. What a setup. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted March 31, 2021 Author Report Share Posted March 31, 2021 I saw a new customer this afternoon. As our long session came to an end after he ordered 2 suits, I asked him what else he has planned for the day. "To go and find the money to pay you," he said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
"6" Posted March 31, 2021 Report Share Posted March 31, 2021 The wonderful sound of industry and the economy ticking along. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 1, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 1, 2021 I just handed over a suit. I'll be in China in a few days, the customer said. You'll be bringing along this suit? I asked him. You managed to get yourself into China? With great difficulty! he said. We had to speak to the government. The embassy here isn't issuing any visas. And yes of course I'm bringing this suit along. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 2, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 2, 2021 Someone from Jeeves (the dry cleaners) just called me. He said the owner would like to have a collaboration with me. He didn't give further details (this is to come via email) , but I suppose JT is to function as a collection/pickup point. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 3, 2021 When I hired my first couple of full-time employees a few years ago, I did not want to impose a rigid structure to their working hours. Because all my life, I detested such an imposition by my employers. Punch-in, punch-out? What is that? This is not to say I am unproductive. I achieve my productivity differently from most people. I thought one is most productive when one is uniquely productive, i.e. you work in a way that is optimised to yourself. The way, say a Toyata Hilux is optimised for rough terrain, and really suboptimal for highway driving. Alas, I've come to the realisation that for most people, a rigid, punitive structure to their working days is necessary. Without it, their productivity is very low. If you look at their lives, they achieve very little that is unique. There is a lack of an internal motive force. They mostly do what they are forced to do. This force may come from parental expectations, societal expectations, or by dint of necessity (they need money, now!). For these people, your typical employment agreement makes perfect sense. I find myself in the unenviable position of drafting such agreements for small people who lead small lives. Anti-humanistic agreements which I would never myself sign. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vrp Posted April 3, 2021 Report Share Posted April 3, 2021 They also impose strict KPIs to ensure the productivity maintain at a certain level. I think that works quite well when a production line is involved, i.e. factory/workshop setup. Engineering/creative fields are quite different tho. Surprise to know that all your employees enjoy such flexible working arrangement. What a privilege. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 3, 2021 I keep treating them as I would have liked to be treated when I was young. They're not worth it. I'm now managing them like hotels would manage their employees. 2 cctv cameras just came in. The idea of monitoring employees via cameras was so alien to me. I resisted the idea for so long. Yet, it has to be done. I actually spent many years in factories. I never liked the management methods there. I guess the faster I acknowledge reality the faster JT progresses. Jeremy, these are just low caliber workers. Pay them as such and manage them as such. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 3, 2021 On 3/31/2021 at 6:36 PM, kotmj said: Visited a project manager (IT infra), currently unemployed. What a setup. I was expecting to be blown away when he started playing his system. The white speakers alone are RM20K. The electronics are a combined RM20K (there is a lot of redundant electronics on his hifi rack, which I am not counting). The power cables maybe 2k, the interconnects another 2k, the speaker cables maybe 3k. The isolation pads on every device and the speakers maybe another 3k. The massive power conditioner which you see on the floor on the right is maybe 5k---its job is to deliver the precise and stable power that TNB couldn't. He then started playing. It was very loud. The tweeters were harsh. But, I can hear that it is admirable. Personally, I prefer to play at a volume where you can imagine a real human singing in the room. The human voice has a certain volume. Beyond that, is simply electronic amplification. The believability is lost. The brain knows it is listening to reproduced music, instead of a human in the room, when the volume is implausibly high. Well anyway, it was too loud for me. Like a very loud club. Yes, you can physically feel the music, simply because there is so much of it. But, I am not accustomed to such high volumes. Also, Beyonce's voice was reproduced in a harsh and brittle way. Like she's screaming at me. I mean, everybody who made all these equipment and did the recording tried so hard to create believability. They were collectively trying to create the illusion that Beyonce is giving you a private performance in the room. By turning up the volume to club levels, you destroy that illusion. It then just becomes like a rave party. When you attend a classical music concert, you'll notice that the music is relatively soft. Partly, this is because an acoustic instrument made of wood and dried animal gut can only make a certain level of sound. Partly, the musician's ear must survive decades of being inches away from the instrument. If merely playing an instrument causes deafness, music would die. To get a bigger sound, you need multiple such instruments. But, there can only be one soloist. So, the volume is quite low at a concert. That's the level to listen to classical music! That's how classical music was for hundreds of years! Amplification is a very recent invention. When you do something, don't miss the POINT of it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cyborg Posted April 4, 2021 Report Share Posted April 4, 2021 These are the same people who would buy a Porsche Cayenne to go off road instead of a Land Rover. I’ve always found Beyoncé’s voice to be harsh though, she sounds to me like she’s half shouting a lot of the time. Maybe that was the cold hard reality of the performance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 6, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 6, 2021 Her shouting is mostly fine. Only not when amplified 3X. Hilux always! Jeeves called again today. I was asked if I could meet with the owner and the bizdev guy Thursday morning. I said sure. I asked what it is about. He said it is about a business partnership; details will be discussed in person. They will come to see me. I no longer think it is about being a collection point. I think it might be a new venture. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 7, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 7, 2021 https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2021/health/global-covid-vaccinations/ The above gives the latest info on vaccination rates by country. Vaccination rate in Malaysia as of today is below 1%. Even in Singapore it is only 8%. Remember, they started vaccinations in December last year. The Singaporean gov tells its people that everyone will be vaccinated by September. It just doesn't look that way to me. Remember, I was previously a project manager. I never believe what any programmer tells me when he will be done with his module. I form my own estimates based on what I see. 2021 will be another lost year. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 8, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 8, 2021 Just had a 40 minute conversation with Jeff, the owner of Jeeves. He's like IQ 140~160. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sid11111 Posted April 9, 2021 Report Share Posted April 9, 2021 On 4/7/2021 at 7:56 PM, kotmj said: https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2021/health/global-covid-vaccinations/ The above gives the latest info on vaccination rates by country. Vaccination rate in Malaysia as of today is below 1%. Even in Singapore it is only 8%. Remember, they started vaccinations in December last year. The Singaporean gov tells its people that everyone will be vaccinated by September. It just doesn't look that way to me. Remember, I was previously a project manager. I never believe what any programmer tells me when he will be done with his module. I form my own estimates based on what I see. 2021 will be another lost year. Vaccinations are not open to the general public yet. Thus the low number of vaccinated in SG. The figure is currently 10 or 9% figure depending on how you read the data now. a 1% increase in 2 days bodes well that the country is on track. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 9, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 9, 2021 Above is the crossover of the Mission 773e speaker. These were built in the 1990's in the UK, using drivers by Audax which then were made in France. Back then, British companies made things in Britain. French companies made things in France. A few years later, all these would be offshored to China. Notice that the cabinet is made of particle board, which some speaker designers believe sound better than mdf. A common modification to older speakers is to replace the electrolytic capacitors. There are two of them in this speaker. These capacitors age and their specifications drift. Also, they have never sounded good. They did the job, but they are not for sound gourmands. Here, I removed one of the capacitors (Tesla branded) which feeds the tweeter. I am about to replace it with a film capacitor. Boom! Film cap is now in! These capacitors were not made for size or cost reasons. They cost about 30X more than electrolytic capacitors, were individually hand made, and are huge. They exist for only one reason: to sound good. And BOOM, I replaced the other one. It is so huge I just mounted it on top of everything. Another view. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 9, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 9, 2021 So, did this modification change the sound? Absolutely! After I changed the capacitor in series with the tweeter, I found that 90% of the sibilances were gone. The zzzzz! at the end of spoken words, the lispiness, was gone. I'm beginning to think they were never in the recording, and are an artifact introduced by the cheap capacitor unable to properly control the tweeter. After changing the capacitor which feeds the woofer, the bass notes became punchier and more textured. I am extremely happy with the changes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 10, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 10, 2021 All hail the Harbeths (center and right). They are similar in size to the Castles (left). All these little speakers are about the size of the legendary BBC LS3/5a broadcast monitors. These Harbeths in particular are drop in replacements for the LS3/5a, which Harbeth also manufactured. They were made in the 1980s. I just picked them up this morning from the previous owner in Metropolitan Square. The Harbeths are of course legendary. In the short listening that I did, I find they sound very similar to the Castles. Had I known this earlier, I might not have bothered with the Harbeths. These speakers are not for blasting rock at an outdoor party. They were conceived for near-field listening, where the speakers are just 3 or 4 feet away from you. Like computer speakers. They don't do well at high volumes. They are best when whispering into your ear. This model has been updated every 10 years or so. You can buy its most recent incarnation here: https://s.lazada.com.my/s.XnS7Q A visit to Harbeth: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 12, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 12, 2021 Two young Malay women in a Bezza came to my house. Part of some banci. They worked with prehistoric tools: pen on paper. They asked a hell lot of questions. Very invasive. Occupation? Tukang jahit. I love telling, say the police, this. They lose interest in me when I tell them this. It's like saying you work in a warong. Income? Now this is a bit complicated. I thought I should give an income that is so low that it helps me blend in with the rest of the population. The truth doesn't matter. What matters is stealth. Don't want to get Hasil all too excited. I said 3k, which I thought was very disingenuous of me. The woman remarked: You make so much as a tailor! She has no clue. If I told her the truth, her brain might explode. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
"6" Posted April 12, 2021 Report Share Posted April 12, 2021 On 4/10/2021 at 2:54 PM, kotmj said: All hail the Harbeths (center and right). https://s.lazada.com.my/s.XnS7Q A visit to Harbeth: Come here for the suits... kena audiophile racun. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 13, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 13, 2021 Hifi being a very new interest of mine, has opened up to me a hitherto obscure field. I am far deeper into hifi than I may be letting on here. Along the way, I've observed so much. The meshing of design, manufacturing, marketing, distribution and retail. I see so much in it that is directly relevant to any business, including tailoring. To end this post, I just want to express how absurd the whole edifice is. It's a joke. The business of hifi is an incredible joke. It can only exist due to the ignorance and nonchalance of the buying public. The whole thing is so cynical. It's pure business. I keep looking for the art. I find it in minute niches only. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 13, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 13, 2021 Feeling a little self conscious about the slenderness of my RM10/m speaker cables, I thought an upgrade is in order. I bought it online and met up with the seller's son, who tells me he's studying Business at Monash. The cable is 3x thicker and heavier than expected. Left, my previous speaker cables. Right, the one I just bought. I immediately felt something was wrong when the boy handed me the cable. It weighed a couple kilos. It is thick like the sort bitcoin mining operators use to steal electricity with. It's the sort TNB uses to supply electricity to factories. Won't my speakers topple backwards from the weight of the cable? What if the binding posts deform from the weight? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 14, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 14, 2021 Paul Graham, nowadays a billionaire venture capitalist, but once an admirer of paintings, wrote that it is incredibly difficult to paint a lifelike portrait. Humans are as old as the universe, and it turns out we are very good at differentiating a reproduction of a face from a real face, having evolved over millions of years looking at each others' faces. For this reason, most portraits are not interesting. They do not hold your attention. There are various parts of them that are obviously "wrong" and "off". Nobody takes those portraits seriously, because they are obviously fake. But, once in a while, the culture and practices of the times make the manual reproduction of human faces a valued skill. Geniuses enter that field because they can do it, and they are very esteemed by society when successful. Such was the world da Vinci was born into. Over a lifetime, he worked on painting the human face with such realism that observers come to regard the subjects of those paintings as alive in a spiritual sense. You can stare at them for hours, and they look alive to you. They hold your attention. Similarly, we are also very sensitive to the human voice. When it is not reproduced truthfully, we know we are listening to merely a reproduction. But what if a loudspeaker reproduces the human voice with such realism that you start searching the room to identify the speaker? Such was the goal of Alan Shaw of Harbeth. He kind of succeeded. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 21, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 21, 2021 Sorting cloths once they arrive Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 22, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 22, 2021 First of all, I discovered that Alan Shaw runs a forum called the Harbeth Users Group. Which is reasonably active. He has run it for very long, since maybe 2005. But, it is completely invisible unless you're a member. It does not turn up on Google search. Once a member, I discovered the world of Alan Shaw. He blogs and educates his customers on his forum, dealing with many topics related to hifi. You need to understand Shaw is a multi, multi, multimillionaire business owner. Harbeth really rakes it in. Yet, he says he spends about 1 day/week on his forum. This is a huge time expenditure on a forum that so few people read. I don't think he can help himself. Communicating to others about his work is part of his life. I find his approach to developing products and running his business extremely sympathetic. He's an engineer at core, and demands rigour in thinking. On the topic of speaker cables, he says any cheap wire will do. Even just cheap power cable. He thinks there is too much voodoo in cables. Last night, I tested my speaker cables. I pitted my most elaborately made cables which are as thick as garden hose and which are composed of copper filaments of various thicknesses, wound in a certain way, and whose core is silver plated against a cable so cheap I use it to feed my powered subwoofer. I think I paid RM5/m for that cheap cable. I connected one cable to the Output A terminals of my amplifier. The other cable to Output B. Both cables are connected to the same speakers. As various songs are playing, I switched between A & B via buttons on the front of the amplifier. I could not tell a damned difference. I switched between A & B maybe 50 times, trying hard to discern a difference, but failed to. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kotmj Posted April 24, 2021 Author Report Share Posted April 24, 2021 1.5% of the Malaysian population fully vaccinated as of today! By the end of the year, we may reach 10%, optimistically speaking. In Singapore it is currently 14.4%. Still a long way to go for them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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