I think your focus carries so much more weight than his. But only for you and maybe a few others.
When you try to project your ‘concerns’ about aliasing onto the buyers of these devices the reality of how aliasing has affected buyers doesn’t support your level of concern.
Yes the science can demonstrate you have a solid objective analysis of how these devices rank with regard to aliasing.
But the years and years of purchases, glowing reviews etc of Kempers are just as clearly an ‘objective indicator’ of how *little* that aliasing actually matters to the vast majority of buyers, players, studio engineers, etc etc.
But you don’t seem to objectively examine that phenomenon and wonder ‘why don’t they care more about it?’.
You jump right into diminishing Kemper and those who enjoy it for not being more concerned.
Why is that?
You’re not making an argument, you’re making an excuse. You’re using popularity as a shield against criticism, as if mass opinion is proof of merit. It isn’t. It never has been. And then you're trying to ask an insincere queston in order to try to make me look like the unreasonable one.
It is a complete nonsense. I've owned 6 Kempers. I've witnessed it from my own lived experience - which for some reason, is all you ever seem to care about. Or maybe it is that you think it is a "gotcha" - but it really isn't.
Whether someone buys a thing or not, uses a thing or not, endorses a thing or not, has very little to do with whether the thing hits a level of quality or not. When the topic is something like aliasing, which is inherently technical, not immediately obvious to the average user, it’s silly to treat broad acceptance as proof of inaudibility or irrelevance.
You're conflating two things - mass appeal and actual quality - as if one proves the other. It doesn’t. You’re pointing to sales numbers and user satisfaction like they cancel out measurable flaws. They don’t. That’s just marketing logic dressed up as analysis.
People buying Kempers in droves doesn’t mean aliasing isn’t a problem. It means most people either can’t hear it, don’t care, or don’t know what it is. That’s not a defense. That’s an indictment of how low the bar is for what’s “good enough.”
The same reason mp3 is so wildly used, and the same reason so much music is listened to through phone speakers; the entire thing is a devaluation of art, and therefore life. The Kemper is a death-cult device.
What you call “diminishing,” I call being honest. If the product aliases - and it
does - then pointing that out isn’t arrogance. It’s accountability. You don't get to wave away technical criticism just because the fanbase is big and happy.
If you can’t handle someone pointing out the emperor has no clothes, that’s fine. But don’t confuse your comfort with consensus. And don’t expect everyone to stay quiet just because the gallery of seals is clapping.
I've just left a company that churns out cheap kit, mid-level kit, and very expensive kit. The cheap (read: not very good!) kit makes all the money. That's proof enough for me that the barometer for quality cannot be how successful something is in the marketplace. It is simply not relevant to the concept of quality.