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Comments to date: 6. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
sarulezzz 10:37am on Tuesday, September 14th, 2010 
The one thing that bothered me most while using this phone was that if you pause in the middle of writing an e-mail for long enough for the screen to ... I considered the iphone but in my opinion, this is far better than the iphone. The iphone feels more like a toy. Then my wife bought this phone.
kallevp 7:04am on Sunday, July 25th, 2010 
I really love this phone, however I have had a few issues with it. One is the battery. The BlackBerry 8120 is a very confusing phone, but I really like all the features.
123ooofree 2:22am on Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010 
I had the worst time with this product it failed after only 2 months and when i went to return it with the plan to get a replacement they credited my ... I needed a car charger. Generally, a charger for a blackberry would have cost more than the total price of this bundle.
iraqin41ws 1:31pm on Sunday, May 2nd, 2010 
Great product for great price without contract, fast shipping and delivery on time. I love my new phone. It is very easy to use .
handshakeit 8:21pm on Tuesday, April 13th, 2010 
I have just bought this smart phone i EU and I am more than happy w/ it. Works just perfect, WiFi is a great future. The camera is just OK, 2.0MP.
duncant 6:03pm on Sunday, April 4th, 2010 
You are NOT charged by ATT for using WiFi, I just called and confirmed this. This phone is extremely awesome! i simply loved it! light weight, great cam, overall is a very good phone! nothing at this moment.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc1

P r o d u c t

R e v i e w

Audio Research LS26 Preamplier
by Vade Forrester vade@soundstage.com October 2007
an easy pick as a Reviewers Choice.
If theres a single manufacturer thats the poster child for high-end audio, it would be Audio Research. Founded in 1970, Audio Research made equipment that starry-eyed audiophiles like me lusted after and bucked the early stampede toward solid-state equipment by suggesting that, in spite of all the gee-whiz advertising, tubes really did sound better. It didnt take a golden ear to validate Audio Researchs claimed superiority; a simple listen made it obvious. Audio Research currently offers updates to many venerable discontinued products to extend their useful lifespans. Thats incredible support. How many manufacturers would bother to update a 30-year old product? For that matter, how many manufacturers even have a 30-year old product? The $5995 USD LS26 occupies the penultimate position in Audio Researchs current preamp lineup. The formidable Reference 3 occupies the top rung, and lots of the technology from it found its way into the LS26. Most obvious is the front-panel display, which is spectacularly well designed to show you whats going on within the LS26. The green vacuum-uorescent display tells you the volume setting, which ranges in non-linear increments from 0 to 103; the balance setting, adjustable from the remote control; the input selected, also selectable from the remote control; the gain for that input; whether the input uses the balanced or unbalanced connectors; whether the phase is normal or inverted, also controllable from the remote control; and whether the unit is set to play in mono, also controllable from the remote control. Possibly the most intriguing item displayed on the front panel is a timer showing how long the two 6H30 vacuum tubes have been in use. The LS26 has classic Audio Research styling: a 19-wide black or silver faceplate with rack-mount handles protruding from the faceplate, and a black metal case, 5 1/4 high by 12 deep, vented to permit cooling. The LS26 is surprisingly lightweighta svelte 16 pounds. The LS26 has a hybrid circuit, with a JFET input stage and tube gain stage using the same 6H30 tubes found in the Reference 3.
With the LS26 in my system, a brightly lit, wide-open soundstage virtually exploded out of my speakers, bristling with spatial and tonal information. Performers were located precisely in space, surrounded by lots of air. Good soundstaging usually goes hand in hand with extended high frequencies, and the LS26 certainly enjoyed extended highs. Another of the LS26s many strong points was an unusually sprightly dynamic performance. Yeah, I guess you could say that I enjoyed my time with LS26. The LS26 has a hybrid circuit, with a JFET input stage and tube gain stage using the same 6H30 tubes found in the Reference 3. The power supply is fully solid state. The LS26, like its big brother, sports a completely balanced circuit. Every input and output has both balanced (XLR) and unbalanced (RCA) jacks.

Review Summary Sound

Features
The front-panel displayis spectacularly well designed to show you whats going on within the LS26. A functional but not fancy plastic unit, the remote control affords total control of the LS26.
Although $5995 is not pocket change, the LS26 is one of the best preamps Ive heard at any price, and I am certain it will compete with pricier models from other makers. The power supply is fully solid state. The LS26, like its big brother, sports a completely balanced circuit. Every input and output has both balanced (XLR) and unbalanced (RCA) jacks. This gave me an opportunity, for the rst time after many years of ownership, to hear what my Meridian CD player sounded like through its balanced outputs. And, for the rst time, I also heard how my

www.soundstage.com

P r o d u c t R e v i e w
After some experimentation, I used TG Audio High Purity revised balanced interconnects to connect the LS26 to my amplier and DNM Reson balanced interconnects to connect my CD player to the LS26. Other connections were all unbalanced. I used interconnects from TG Audio, Blue Marble Audio, Crystal Cable, and Purist Audio Design. Audio Research advised that the LS26 needs a minimum of 300 hours break-in, so I waited until that milestone had passed before listening critically. Thanks to the tube timer, it was easy to know when the break-in time had been reached. I continued to hear improvements until the preamp neared 500 hours of use.
Atma-Sphere S-30 Mk III amplier sounded with a real balanced connection. A fuse holder makes it easy to replace fuses if required, and an IEC connector lets you use aftermarket power cords should you desire. A preamps basic job is to select an input, set the volume level, and provide enough voltage gain to drive a power amp. Any noise or distortion added, any changes to the character of the sound (which, by denition, is distortion, but not always something we know how to measure) are indications of weaknesses. The LS26s specications tell us it has few measurable weaknesses. A noise level of just 1.3 microvolts, or 100dB below a 2-volt output, is incredibly low for a tube output stage. Total harmonic distortion plus noise is rated at just 0.01% at 2 volts balanced output. Frequency response is a wide 0.2Hz to 160kHz +0/-3dB at rated output and ruler at within the audio band. A functional but not fancy plastic unit, the remote control affords total control of the LS26. Some of the preamps features, like setting left-to-right balance, are accessible only through the remote control. The bottom end of the remote is curved, so you could easily orient it even in a very dark room; however, the buttons arent backlit. Input selection is direct; each of the inputs has its own button, which is legibly labeled. So to play a CD, youd press the CD button; to play an LP, youd press the Phono button. Wait a minutethe LS26 doesnt have a phono stage, so how can it play an LP? Well, perhaps the Phono label is a bit misleading; its actually the input where youd plug in an external phono preamp, like Audio Researchs PH5. Even though the PH5 has only unbalanced output connections, you might expect it would work well with the LS26, and youd be right. The LS26s remote control can spoil you fast. Three levels of gain settings let you match the LS26 to almost any conceivable amplier. You can even invert the phase of each individual input to see if that improves the sound. You can also dim (eight different brightness levels) or turn off the display entirely. I thought the LS26 sounded a smidgen quieter and cleaner with the display off. Even if you have the display turned off, when you make a change to one of the settings, such as volume level, the display switches back on so you can see the change, then turns off again after a few seconds. Unlike some fancy remote controls, the LS26s was completely intuitive to operate and everything worked just as youd expect it to.

With the LS26 in my system, a brightly lit, wide-open soundstage virtually exploded out of my speakers, bristling with spatial and tonal information. Performers were located precisely in space, surrounded by lots of air. Most components today produce decent soundstages, but the LS26s is quite special. Arial Ramirezs Missa Criolla on the CD of the same name, performed by Jos Carreras and the Choral Society of Bilbao [Philips 420 955-2], sounded like it was recorded in a huge space with a highly reverberant sonic signature, which it wasit was recorded in a church. With tenor soloist Carreras spotlighted well in front of the chorus and orchestra, the soundstage stretched both wide and deep, just as the performers were probably arranged in the church. With some preamps, the sound of this CD could be described as an amorphous mush, but the LS26 localized the chorus and orchestra precisely. Good soundstaging usually goes hand in hand with extended high frequencies, and the LS26 certainly enjoyed extended highs. Fortunately, the LS26s treble range was oh, so smooth, totally devoid of any hint of peakiness or edginess. When I played Argentos For the Angel, Israfel, played by Eiji Oue and the Minnesota Orchestra on Reference Recordings 30th Anniversary Sampler [Reference Recordings RR-908], the very high opening chime was ethereally delicate, but it was easy to hear the entire envelope of sound, from the initial hard transient produced when the chime was struck, through the decay of the note as it hung suspended in space and nally died out. An experienced percussionist could probably tell what brand of chime was used, so great was the detail. Another of the LS26s many strong points was an unusually sprightly dynamic performance. Music sounded very bouncy and energetic. I dont mean that Perry Como sounded like heavy metal, but the music moved forward with great pace and momentum. It just seemed to ow out of the speakers with palpable life and vigor. Sometimes a component will exhibit good dynamic performance in only part of the frequency spectrum, but the LS26s excellent dynamic performance was consistent across the entire spectrum. A dynamic discontinuity means the component sounds different in different parts of the frequency range, and its just as noticeable as a discontinuity in frequency response. Not so the LS26; its dynamic nimbleness extended from the treble to bass. Although the bass was fast and detailed, it was not overly weighty or deep. I dont mean to say the LS26s bass was weak; when the LS26 drove the monster Cerwin-Vega CLS-215 speakers, it produced very deep bass with all the impact and weight one would expect from two 15 woofers per cabinet. But it didnt overemphasize

Whats it all about?

Getting to know you, getting to know all about you
I placed the LS26 on the shelf in my rack where my reference preamp normally sits. Audio Research goes out of its way to include a decent power cord with each component, so I used the stock cord. I tried both balanced and unbalanced interconnects. Although Audio Research believes the LS26s balanced connections sound best (and I think theyre right), the unbalanced connections sounded pretty doggoned good to me. In fact, which type of connection sounded best often depended on the interconnects used; unbalanced connections sounded better than balanced if they included superior interconnects. Its hard to compare balanced connections to unbalanced, since balanced outputs have more gain; however, the sound seemed somewhat quieter and just a tad more dynamic with balanced connections.

I missed it. The deHavillands sound was more tube-like, which I mean in a good way. Instrumental tonality was even better developed, sounding positively lush at timesnot articially so, just more vivid and realistic. Soundstaging was also excellent, although not as pinpoint as with the LS26. Dynamics were superb, on par with the LS26s handling, and even better in the lower frequencies. In fact, in my system, the deHavilland preamps weightier low end sounded more realistic. However, replacing a couple of the deHavillands Vishay resistors with similar-value Caddocks restored the highs quite dramatically but may have also reduced the lows a bit. In other words, by swapping only a couple of resistors, I made the deHavilland preamp sound a lot like the LS26. Unfortunately, the resistors were still burning in when the review deadline loomed, so I can only report a possibility that the deHavillands highs may become better than reported here. All in all, the deHavilland Mercury 2 Remote presented an alternate view of the music, and depending on your personal preferences and your systems sound, you might nd it preferable to the LS26s. Neither preamp was awless; the LS26s low end was a bit light in my system, while the deHavillands highs (with Vishay resistors) were a smidgen restrained. The LS26s far more comprehensive features could easily sway many buyers toward it. And if you need or prefer balanced connections, the LS26 is the clear choice, because the deHavilland preamp has no balanced connections, given that its internal circuitry is unbalanced.
bass, as some brands of components do to create an immediately favorable impression. If youre looking for a preamp to juice up your systems bass, the LS26 may not be for you. Tube-based components are known for their midrange performance, and the LS26 was no exception. Particularly appealing was the tonality of orchestral instruments, which sounded unusually complete. If you play an instrument, or listen to a lot of live, unamplied music, youll recognize that the LS26 reproduces instruments with great realism. That realism is due not only to tonal accuracy, but also to dynamic accuracy, which further increased the believability of instrumental images. Theres plenty of detail, but its well integrated into the overall soundeld, so it doesnt jump out at you. OK, the LS26 handled musical instruments well, but how did it do with vocals? Those are often harder to get right than instruments. Well, if youre expecting a good grade on vocals, youre right. Jos Carrerass solo in Missa Criolla was reproduced with exceptional detail, so all the many nuances a veteran operatic tenor brings to a piece were easy to hear; yet the LS26 was not even slightly analytical. Similarly, Barbara Bonneys recording of Edvard Griegs Vren, on the CD Diamonds in the Snow [Decca 466 762-2], was another delight through the LS26. Bonneys radiant, light soprano ranged from very soft to very powerful with no apparent effort, and the LS26 didnt inch when she poured on the volume. As with Carerrass work, the LS26 revealed all the nuance and inection Bonney brings to these art songs. Also worth mentioning is Antonio Pappanos piano accompaniment, which ranged from powerful to just a whisper. The LS26 revealed all the extremely soft piano notes clearly, and you should hear how long the closing note hung in the air as it decayed into oblivion. Yeah, I guess you could say that I enjoyed my time with LS26.

The whole is greater than the sum of the parts
Different companies, different choices
My $5200 deHavilland Mercury 2 Remote is a more Spartan design than the LS26. Although its remote control regulates volume level and muting, thats it. No fancy display, no tube timer, no balance control. But it does everything I need. The preamp employs a proprietary 32-step remote volume control that uses discrete resistors. Designer Kara Chaffees choice of tubes was, to say the least, unusual; she used type 85 triodes to amplify the signal, followed by 6BL7 triodes as cathode followers to provide a low output impedance. These tubes, long out of production, have an immediacy that I havent heard from other small-signal tubes. A beefy 5AW4 rectier powers the preamp. My unit uses optional V-Cap capacitors and special switches that provide two different gain settings, somewhat like the LS26s gain settings. The latter is a custom feature to assist me in accommodating the wide variety of input sensitivities for the various power ampliers I review, which so far have ranged from 0.14 volts (the Manley Mahis) to 2.8 volts (my Atma-Sphere S-30 Mk III) for full power output. After three months of listening exclusively to the LS26, I returned the deHavilland preamp to its accustomed place on my equipment rack. It wasnt hard to distinguish between the two. The deHavillands sound was weighted a bit more toward the lower end of the frequency spectrum, so it sounded mellower. The highs were not quite as extended, and after living with the LS26s treble range,
The LS26s open, detailed, dynamic sound drew me into the music, demanding my full attention. Often when Id put on a CD for casual listening and try to do some reading, Id put down my book so I could devote my full attention to the music. Yet the LS26s presentation was very relaxed and spontaneous, with music owing naturally out of the system and beguiling me with its great charm. Audio Research has somehow managed to combine two often diametrically opposed goals into a single chassis: The LS26 does all the traditional audiophile things spectacularly well, while at the same time producing music that is both relaxing and involving. Although Audio Research believes the balanced connections sound a bit better than the unbalanced (as do I), you shouldnt rule out using the LS26 with an unbalanced amplier or source. But if you have a balanced amplier, the LS26 will probably extract its best sound connected balanced. When a component combines as many excellent performance traits as the LS26, its hard not to gush over it. And in spite of my best attempts to remain objective, its likely youve sensed my great enthusiasm. Although $5995 is not pocket change, the LS26 is one of the best preamps Ive heard at any price, and I am certain it will compete with pricier models from other makers, both of which make it an easy pick as a Reviewers Choice.

.Vade Forrester vade@soundstage.com

ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT

Loudspeakers Power Ampliers Preamplier Analog Digital Sources Interconnects Speaker Cables Power Cords Accessories
Opera Audio Consonance M12, Cerwin-Vega CLS-215. Atma-Sphere S-30 Mk III stereo amp, Art Audio PX 25 stereo amp, Wright Sound Company WPA3.5 mono amps. deHavilland Mercury 2 Remote. Linn LP12 turntable, Graham 2.2 tonearm, van den Hul Frog cartridge, Audio Research PH5 phono stage. Meridian 508.24 CD player, Oppo DV-970HD universal player. Crystal Cable CrystalConnect Piccolo, Purist Audio Design Venustas, DNM/Reson TSC, TG Audio High Purity Revised. Crystal Cable CrystalSpeak Micro, Purist Audio Design Venustas, Blue Marble Audio speaker cables. Purist Audio Design Venustas, Blue Marble Audio Lightning. Walker Audio Talisman LP/CD treatment, VPI HW-16.5 record cleaner.
Audio Research LS26 Preamplier Price: $5995 USD. Warranty: Three years parts and labor. Audio Research Corporation 3900 Annapolis Lane North Plymouth, Minnesota 55447 Phone: (763) 577-9700 Fax: (763) 577-0323 Website: www.audioresearch.com

Company Info

Schneider Publishing Inc. Box Rideau Street Ottawa ON K1N 9N5 Canada

 

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