JeffLancaster said:
Well, I tried: "You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to bennychico11 again."
I got him for you
Mistral, I apologize if my early posts came of as sounding like I was smacking on you. I really had not intended that. Someone here siad (I can't find the post now) that we were just having some friendly fun over the fact that the magazine actually caught some people with that stuff. An April Fool's joke is no good if no one falls for it

.
No need to feel bad about falling for it, we've all done it at one point or another. However, your refusal to accept it when everybody who responded to this thread has said the same thing is starting to make you look a bit stubborn for stubborn's sake. You wanted a response to those articles, and you not only got it, you got a virtually unanimous response from everyone so far, that those quotes have virtually no basis in truth. What more do you want?
First you took the position that there was no way that a magazine would do such a thing. When it was demonstrated to you that such things are done all the time, then you retreated - but still refused to capitulate - to the point that "there is no proof" that this is what indeed happened here. You are a stubborn guy, aren't you?
You want "proof?" The proof is right there in the very first quote you provided us:
"We can't stress this enough - compress, compress, and compress again. The compressor should be the first thing, and often the last thing you add to any channel."
To anybody who has left the house and been around the block in this industry, including virtually everybody who has responded to this thread, that quote is so blatently and obviously packed to the brim with sarcasm that you can practically see the sarcasm dripping off the page and pooling on the floor. One would almost think that chessrock posted that

. There simply is no question that printing such a thing was never meant to be a serious position.
As far as the digital thing goes, "in the red" is a slang term whose definition is running a VU meter above 0dBVU (over 100% modulation) in an analog circuit. In digital, there is no such thing. Once you get to 0dBFS, everything stops. Period. There is no such thing as +1dBFS or any other value above 0dBFS; all those digital "1"s and "0"s are all maxed out at 0dBFS and there just ain't no more. There is NO digital "in the red". This is yet another joke.
It's easy to understand those that at first thought the original Orson Welles radio broadcast of "War of the Worlds" was real and not fiction. Those that continued to believe it after everyone else told them what was up are much harder to understand.
G.
[EDIT:] P.S. As proof that it can happen to anybody, I got taken by Benny's May Fool's joke

. Silly me, I should have known that it was unlikely that he'd receive such a fast response. But it said what I wanted it to say, so I believed it. That's how such things work. That is how people get duped. Do I feel humiliated? Not really. I said "D'oh", slapped myself in the head, had a chuckle and moved on.
And, Benny, I owed you those points from a long time ago anyway.
