
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
IMHO is "snobbish" (sorry, can't think of a better adjective!) to state (without evidence) that a microphone can only be "reasonable" at $800 and does not enter the realms of "good" until $1200.
Only if you limit what "good" means.
I think what you're really wanting to say is "good enough"...which is a different discussion.
It is also as well to remember that most of the results of these multi k$ mics will be heard on cheap cans or buds via MP3 or on the "worse than FM" DAB! Not an excuse not to use them of course, just an observation.
Yeah...but it's an observation that then seems to drive decision making...and basically implies that no one should really care....and it comes back again to the it's "good enough" argument.
I'm always appreciative of people who talk about capturing audio nuances and finer shades of audio quality. That's not snobbishness, and will only seems as such to someone who just wants to defend the "good enough" approach.
There's nothing wrong with working on a low budget...at least you're still recording, but there's also nothing wrong with looking beyond that. The laws of physics and acoustics don't change to accommodate budgets...they always apply.
I think people should have a broader understanding of what's out there and what's possible...and then maybe they will also have broader expectations and bigger goals. If it's always dumbed down to some "good enough for home recording" view...you've already gutted any greater expectations, and then those noobs just want the easy answer and cut to the chase...and what's the value in that?