Annoying Forum traits

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Forums didn't exist during Blockbuster days. I remember I used to ask the shopkeeper of my local video library to recommend any new films that have come in..... probably more so because you know the video quality of a new VHS tape will be pristine. 🙂
That's fair enough, as you likely knew the guy running an independent video library, or some staff in a more national store like Blockbuster. What I'm talking about is more akin to asking some random person who is also browsing!
 
Forums seem mostly full of people saying what they don’t like. If that’s what folks want to do, more power to them. It’s an open space, and we’re kind to each other it’s exactly the diversity of topics & opinions that make this site, and the internet in general, a place I love to spend my time.
That's the direction social media in all its forms has generally taken. I'm in a number of film groups on Facebook, and someone might post up about a film they've just watched (which could be a stone cold classic that everyone loves), and a bunch of people will just wade in to slag it off - the worst ones being those who said they only watched 20 minutes and couldn't watch any more so they turned it off, which in my books means you don't have a valid opinion! It's like listening to two tracks of an album and deciding it's rubbish.
 
For fourteen years I have been a member of a computer forum, not as busy as it once was but, has a hardcore of longstanding members that keep it active.

On there, threads frequently go off topic, so much so it's expected, there is quite a bit of pee-taking and, has sections where you can talk about just about anything, as long as it's legal. All of this is good if you like an easy going, friendly forum but, what makes it really good, is that if anyone asks a question about how to do something, what to buy, how to fix something or, any other problem whether or not computer related, there will always be someone willing to help or, offer support. It's good way for a forum to be.
 
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I genuinely don't get why anyone would seek the advice of audiophiles in the first place!

Mostly subjective toss, dressed up as supposed wisdom (or worse, fact), they think they've gained from years of titting about box swapping or spaffing money at the wall on pointless accessories.

Then hearing differences in every small change because they completely disregard the physiology and psychology of how we process sound and only "believe in their ears"...

And yet here you are - on a hi-fi forum. If you're paying for a product, subjectivity will wade in justifiably. Anyway, nobody buys a Mercedes Benz because it's engineered like no other car in the world anymore. Maybe Linn comes close to that, but still not everyone likes the sound.
 
If you're paying for a product, subjectivity will wade in justifiably.
Off course it will and that's precisely my point!

If I'm spending my money on a product then the only opinion that matters is mine!

Not some random forumites and especially if they're the kind of idiot who thinks they hear differences between bits of wire and the like...

Anyway, nobody buys a Mercedes Benz because it's engineered like no other car in the world anymore. Maybe Linn comes close to that, but still not everyone likes the sound.

No. Linn are a prime example of everything that is wrong with the industry....
 
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A guy on another forum mentioned a £400 turntable said it was a bargain costing the same as a night out. I replied to him and said it's a good job I don't go out anymore then. He laughed
 
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