The predominant line of thinking in this thread, if I'm not mistaken, seems to be that it doesn't matter if I can see what I've done, that such knowledge is irrelevant.
No, that's not my point at all. My point was there's no way that something I wrote four years ago could possibly know what you want or need done to the track that's sitting in front of you today, that the only person who could possibly know that is you, and that the only way you could know that is by using your ears and your head.
But above and beyond that, let me go back to what I said yesterday, that the frequency chart is by far the most popular page on the website. No other page on the website, including the front page, can come anywhere near close to making that claim. For November almost 58% of the visits went to the frequency chart first on purpose, with the other 42% divided amongst all the rest of the website.
Yet, much of the rest of the site covers far more important issues; from CR monitor selection to listening biases to CR room acoustics to how to read mic specifications to meter reading, dB scales and gain structure, to a course on the use of compression.
Now part of the frequency chart's popularity is because of it's pretty colors and fancy-schmancy interactive layout, yeah; but that's only a small part of it. The absolute #1 reason for it's popularity - and I get this from the comments and discussions and and all that that come from the actual users of it - is because people are using it in place of an ability or a willingness to actually use their ears.
They can't use any of the other charts or information or tutorials or columns to try to do that; the frequency chart is the only resource on that website that they can attempt to use as a replacement for their ears.
That's exactly the #1 reason why it's more popular than the rest of the website combined. And that's also exactly the number #1 reason why I think it's the worst thing on that site by a long shot. I'm trying to help people use their ears, not avoid using them.
I don't care if they think it's helping them in the short run, because it's hurting them overall, whether they realize and appreciate that fact or not. It may help them win the current battle or it may not, but it's almost certainly helping make the war last longer than it needs to either way.
G.