Good insights, and not just software developers, really. We don’t like ads, sensationalism, or anything reeking of bullshit. If we have to talk to someone to find out the price, the product may as well not exist.
Good insights, and not just software developers, really. We don’t like ads, sensationalism, or anything reeking of bullshit. If we have to talk to someone to find out the price, the product may as well not exist.
Are nerds all audiophiles tho? 320kbps is usually fine. $300 speakers are usually fine. Nerds do the research, audiophiles are seeking unobtanium.
Yeah, I’m not an audiophile, but I do care about my audio. I by things that give a really good bang for my money, I don’t chase the top end of the top end. My headphones cost something like $100, my desktop speakers were about that much as well, and they’re both incredible. I’m not going to chase that last 5% or whatever that’s going to drain my wallet, I just want something solid that’s not going to break in 6 months.
What about gamers? What do you think all those cool designs are for?
Those are for people who want to look like gamers.
I love playing games, but I don’t buy any of that crap. I buy quality hardware, never overspend on the top-of-the-line for a few pct gain, and only upgrade when I’m not getting a great experience. I don’t buy RGB nonsense, avoid “gamer” branding, etc, and end up spending a fraction of what “enthusiasts” spend while having a very similar actual gaming experience.
It seems there are two groups at the extremes of any given niche: “enthusiasts” and value seekers. The first group sucks up all that high end and branded stuff (for gaming, that’s top tier CPUs and GPUs, RGB crap, “gaming” chairs, etc) and largely keep the hobby lucrative and post pictures of their setup and whatnot. The latter group want the most bang for their buck and end up getting something about 90% as good as the enthusiasts while spending about 10-20%, and tend to be very active in text forms in forums and whatnot, so they’ll be providing reviews and whatnot. I’ve always been in the second group of whatever thing I’m interested in, so most of the marketing is just noise and I want reviews from others in the community instead of marketing and branding.
No, but I’d say that all audiophiles are nerds