As a (sane) audiophile, I happily use Apple devices for enjoyable listening. Their headphones have amazing clarity and soundstage for their size. If you keep in mind that AirPods are calibrated to your ears with your iPhone's FaceID camera, they provide nice, tailored sound.

I also have nice, but not over the top equipment. Yes, some of them sound nicer and more detailed (you can't compare large, 100W/channel bookshelf speakers with headphones, can you?), but for getting 95% of what they provide without any effort is pretty worth it.

Last, but not the least, Apple used Wolfson DACs in their iPods for most of their lifetime. Their replacement DACs are not worse than the Wolfsons, but probably even better.

> If you keep in mind that AirPods are calibrated to your ears with your iPhone's FaceID camera, they provide nice, tailored sound.

That's only for spatial audio.

That’s what Apple states, yes, but I suspect that it’s also used for calibrating the inner microphones of newer AirPods which is used for the “live eq” which works by listening the feedback inside the ear.

From my experience, Apple can sometimes “forget” to tell things.

>> As a (sane) audiophile

this is something you believe about yourself, but an oxymoron for everyone else.

I love this “oxymoron” label slapped on me, without knowing what audiophile actually means.

Its meaning has distorted as much as how the word hacker is distorted.

Yes, I love listening to music and quality audio, but don’t have a soundtrack to benchmark systems. My bar is simple: Do I enjoy what I hear? It doesn’t have to fit into a recipe. It should be enjoyable, period.

A pair of Apple AirPods can be as enjoyable as two $10K speakers powered by a separate stack costing $20K. It’s akin to loving that hole in the wall restaurant as well as that Michelin rated one. Both are enjoyable in its own sense.

Well, I use the same amp, turntable and tuner for the last 30 years, and the same CD player and speakers for the last 10 years.

Changed the speakers since I had no space for the older Akai set, and replaced the CD player since the older one was acting up.

Replaced the Logitech Bluetooth receiver for a Fiio DAC last week since I found one for a bargain.

Everything is connected with high quality yet 30 year old cables.

I believe that’s a pretty sane evolution for someone who grown up with music, and performed some.