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dijityesterday at 4:04 PM1 replyview on HN

Which assumptions? The weight reduction on the S2 is documented and the cable’s 65W rating is what the tester confirmed.

If the argument is that B&W deliberately chose a thick cable to seem premium, it doesn’t square with them actively slimming down the headphones. B&W are primarily a speaker company, their USB-C product range is basically just a few headphones and earbuds.

More likely they just sourced a generic cable that happened to support high wattage and didn’t think about the mismatch.

Either way, we’re deep in the weeds on B&W’s cable procurement now. The root point is that USB-C is a mess. You can’t tell what a cable supports by looking at it, and even premium manufacturers are shipping cables that don’t do what you’d reasonably expect.

That’s exactly the problem the Treedix from the article solves.


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cjbgkaghyesterday at 4:21 PM

My point on weight was that the market for that it is common, which is probably a stronger statement than needed. I should have made the weaker argument and said the market exists which only needs one example. The company Beats can serve as that example, this company sells the majority of premium headphones but I don’t actually know what percentage have weights placed in them. I am assuming a non trivial percentage.

You are using circular reasoning in your logic, you assume the premise is true and from there you derive your evidence.

I would contend that someone thought about it and decided to go with the cheaper option because they could get away with it. I would consider my assumption to have more grounding given my experience with manufacturing and cost accounting.

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