Linux-Based Audiophile CD Archival System 414
cporter writes: "My disappointment with the quality of compressed digital music formats (MP3, Ogg, WMA, the list goes on ...) and playback hardware has so far forced me to stick with the good ol' aluminum coated plastic discs. However, Linn has created the Kivor Knekt multi-unit linux-based hard disk system for archiving CDs in uncompressed form for cataloging and playback (yes, it does support ripping to MP3). It includes the Tunboks storage system, the Linnk control interface, the Oktal D/A converter, and the PCI Musik Machine sound board. The system can support up to 11 hard drives for storing audio. Stereophile magazine has a review in their current dead-tree issue, not available online, during which the reviewer hooked up a keyboard, mouse, and monitor, and found an AMD Duron system running Linux. The price is a mere $20,000, plus installation. Guess I'm sticking to CDs for the moment." Looks amazing despite the price. They should send me a review model :)
Try FLAC (Score:5, Insightful)
http://flac.sf.net
David
jukebox (Score:2, Funny)
Ummm... (Score:2, Informative)
Sorry to nitpick, but....aren't they PLASTIC coated ALUMINUM discs?
Not really (Score:2, Informative)
Unless you're dealing with double-sided discs like DVD, the aluminum is deposited on top of the polycarbonate disc. I suppose the resin they spray on top of that to provide some nominal protection might technically be called "plastic," but it's really more like paint.
Most people don't realize that the label side is the fragile side.
I defy you... (Score:2)
To be able to tell the difference between an MP3 encoded at 640 kbps and the actual wav file. Just because the shit you dl off napster's quality sucks, doesn't mean the whole format does.
Re:I defy you... (Score:2, Interesting)
To us very snobby audiophile types any form of even uncompressed digital music is not up to snuff of good ole analog. Yes, that's right I did a back to back comparison of an $8000 CD rig (Manley tube DAC and supremely isolated AudioMecha transport) against a mediocre turntable (about $2000 new). Wasn't even close the LP sounded leaps and bounds better. There weren't small little audiophile only nit pickings to be found, either. Everyone that listened to both setups liked the LPs better. And this was with recently remastered "audiophile" quality CDs vs their analog LP counter parts.
So, to suggest that any sort of *lossy* compression can stand up, well... color me a skeptic.
That being said, everything I've heard about Sony's new SACD seems pretty good.
Re:I defy you... (Score:3, Interesting)
Was this a blind test? I.E., did you get someone else to play the audio, from somewhere you and the participants couldnt see? If not, it isn't much of a test. Anyone asked would pick the turntable, since it's generally common knowledge that "turntables sound better", so your mind plays tricks on you. It wouldn't be much of a test unless it was run like 10 times, each time blind, with different tracks, switching the 2 sources randomly. THEN we'll see which one really sounds better to you.
Re:I defy you... (Score:2)
OK, I'll concede that your turntable most likely did sound much better than your CD. However, this doesn't mean (as your square wave vs. sine wave implies) that analog cannot be perectly represented in digital form. Given a frequent enough number of samples, a sine wave can be represented indistiguishable ( to a human, at least) as a sum of square waves (digital). It just has to do with the size you have to work with. Anyone who continues to claim (once it has been released) that DVD audio is inferior to turntables will be, I expect, deluding themselves.
snobby audiophile types and physics (Score:3, Insightful)
The bottom line is, CDs encode the entire range of human hearing. The sampling is beyond the Nyquist frequency of human hearing.
The only way that a human could tell a digital recording is different from an analog is if it is done incorrectly, i.e. bad digitization (recording) or bad analog conversion (the result of a badly adjusted CD player).
Re:snobby audiophile types and physics (Score:2, Interesting)
Most audiophile LP types agree that this new SACD format bridges the gap between LPs and CDs. I have yet to hear it so I can't comment on that.
not the whole story (Score:2)
It's true that the sampling rate at 44khz is just about enough to cover the nyquist of human hearing (about 20khz, so they say). But this doesn't say anything about the sampling resolution. You could sample at 44hkz but use 4 bits per sample, and the result would be awful. 16 bits is pretty damn good, but it is not perfect. (And it doesn't help that it is spread linearly over the range. 32-bit floating point sounds much nicer.)
Anyway, I say that CDs sound pretty good, personally, though I do wish that it wasn't so common to compress (as in, flatten out the dynamics, not as in MP3) them so much. If they didn't do this (DVD audio typically doesn't), I think they would sound as good as LPs (and be much more convenient and robust).
Re:not the whole story (Score:2)
This was discussed on k5 a while back, and I think I finally won the argument about the mythical possiblity of jitter influencing digital sound. (short recap: since it is possible to extract a bit-perfect digital copy of a CD in a cdrom drive (ie rip but don't compress) then jitter is by definition not discernable.)
However, what makes a good DAC is seldomly discussed. To this end, I am somewhat thinking of getting a good home theater / amp
Re:snobby audiophile types and physics (Score:3, Interesting)
i'm not qualified to debate that point. but consider this: people may actually LIKE the imperfections inherent in record players. even if the CD is scientifically better, a record be more subjectively pleasing to some peoples' ears.
Re:snobby audiophile types and physics (Score:2)
Re:snobby audiophile types and physics (Score:2)
Oh, well, then perhaps you can name one piano manufacturer that makes a piano that has a key at the 16000 Hz (or close to) frequency? Or a violin that can play that note at the fundamental frequency?
Or can you name one speaker or headphone that reproduces a sound at 2x or 3x 16000 Hz, so we can compare the difference? You get the speaker and I will get two amplifiers, one digital and one analog, playing at 32 kHz or 48 kHz, so we can find out which sounds better...
Re:I defy you... (Score:2)
It's the marketing people who started pushing it as a high-end product -- if only because the first CD players started out in the $4-digits range.
About the only real value of CD quality digital audio is that you can copy it to your heart's content, with zero quality loss, and and mix it, within reason, with near-zero quality loss.
For proper digital studio work, however, you want to digitize at a multiple of the CD bit rate with a couple of extra bits of dynamic range.
DAT doesn't actually cut it. Although it's a higher sample rate than CD, it's not a whole multiple, so you end up with (sometimes nasty) artifacts when you convert.
Re:I defy you... - actually want system specs (Score:2, Informative)
There is little in the way of technical innovation in this field. Mostly that's done by the big labs, like Dolby, who came up with AC-3 (our current standard of 5.1 digital surround sound). Basically there are some ASIC's that manufacturers put into their receivers and off they go. Sound quality differences come down to the individual components used, and how much a manufacturer pays attention to component noise in their designs. That is, you really, really don't want a big audibly humming transformer sitting right next to the output stage of your amplifier!
Basically, you want good quality transformers, capacitors, internal wiring, switches/binding posts and overall design. Switching and binding posts should be as far away from any sort of noise generator as possible, capacitors should seem obscenely large and a nice, big transformer, or two should be present. That doesn't always mean you're on the right path, but it's a good indicator.
As far as brands and what not drop me an email at justin@websocietyinc.com. I went through all of this so I have a pretty good idea and am happy to share...
Re:I defy you... (Score:4, Funny)
your computer by carefully coloring the case of
your hard drive with a green marker. Too many
people give MP3s a bad rap because they don't
know this simple tip.
Re:I defy you... (Score:3, Funny)
(better throw in a :-) for the humor-impaired while I'm at it...)
Re:I defy you... (Score:2)
I read this page, but I am at a loss to see what the difference would be between using this and say, bzip2, which is a lossless compression scheme. Unless this is optimized especially for audio, and gets you smaller filesizes? THough I can't see that, if the best possble compression is 45%.
Re:I defy you... (Score:2)
That's a good question. Offhand, I don't know how the compression ratios compare between bzip2 and flac. I know flac does a much better job than zip.
The other benefit of flac is that there are plugins available for winamp and xmms. Also, AFAIK, there's been some recent streaming-related work in progress--might have made it into the recent 1.0.1 release.
CD quality (Score:2)
The limiting factor in any music reproduction system is the transducer that converts the electric signal to sound. The BEST speakers and headphones cannot even reach 0.1% THD, which is equivalent to 10 bits resolution.
BTW, even the most modest digital systems are surprisingly good. I have measured my Sound Blaster card, by looping a sine wave from the output to the input through an ordinary cable. By doing a Fourier Transform on the input signal, I found it to have a response starting from 7 Hz (-3dB point), with NO discernible distortion anywhere. That's right, there was no second (or higher) harmonic above the -96 dB noise floor.
price for additional hard drives? (Score:3, Interesting)
[TMB]
Re:price for additional hard drives? (Score:2)
so it would be possible to do this with ide drives and cut down the cost significantly. but for a price of $20,000 it better be scsi.
you might want to look into non-lossy compression (Score:3, Informative)
there are other options, though, that use lossless compression, so what you get from the file is the same as what's on the cd. there are a few out there, but shorten is the only format i can remember. it's widely used for trading live recordings where the fans want the best possible quality without sending
$20,000 (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Archiving Audio (Score:2)
I can most definitely tell the difference between my $700 CD player and my $900 computer playing through my stereo system. Now, I'll admit that for an awful lot of people, it doesn't matter, and that's OK, but to me, it does.
Even the Linn product makes sonic sacrifices in the name of convenience, but obviously a take-no-prisoners audiophile isn't going to buy one.
-h-
Re:Archiving Audio (Score:2)
uncompressed? hello? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm doing it now on a 300 GB RAID 5 partition, and things are sweet.
Read about SHN here [umbc.edu], and then use it.
Re:uncompressed? hello? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:uncompressed? hello? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the same rationale as people who think that a CD player that has a gold plated/rare woods case sounds better than a standard plasticky CD player regardless of what actually is inside.
Same goes for people who spend hundreds of dollars for gold-everything interconnects (cables) and other various snake oil products.
Music appreciation is by definition subjective, so if one spends several hundred bucks for a component which *might* produce a difference measurable in a lab with ultra-sensitive equipment, one mysteriously becomes able to hear this difference even while listening to the newly enhanced hi-fi kit from three rooms away and under the shower...
While it's obvious that there *is* quite a difference between a $300 hi-fi, and a $3000, most of the things above a, say, $5,000 threshold for a complete system (CD+pre+amp+speakers+interconnects) tend to cater more to your aesthetic senses than actually sound incrementally better. If the room you put this system in has not been modified in any way (i.e. if you stick the speakers in a wall mounted library 3" apart from each other etc.) cut the $5,000 by half at least. Same goes if you live in an apartment and you can't turn the knob on your 400W RMS amp higher than 1 without your neighbours threatening to evict you.
Re:uncompressed? hello? (Score:2)
Complicated, expensive, and stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Complicated, expensive, and stupid (Score:2)
(Yes, hard drives can fail, but as long as you stick with fairly decent drives and avoid junk [maxtor.com], you should be OK...especially for something that more than likely won't be fired up all the time.)
Re:Complicated, expensive, and stupid (Score:2)
I don't know... (Score:2, Informative)
I was actually quite i
mpressed. I was expecting clicks, pops, crappy dynamic range, etc etc. However I ripped most of the tracks on that CD myself, using mid-high (192ish) quality VBR encoding. Some of the songs I did NOT rip myself that were encoded at 128kbps were obviously inferior, but as long as you rip them well, you should have a good bang for your buck audio experience.
Of course, YMMV.
How about MP3 DVD-Rs? (Score:2)
And *that* would be sweet: having essentially my entire music collection on one disc. I couldn't squeeze everything onto 5 CDs without compressing well past the point where I start to notice artifacts.
Re: mp3 sound quality (Score:2, Interesting)
No, those artifacts are from low bitrates. I ripped all of my Rush albums (cymbals are very important
Not really a solution comparable to MP3S etc (Score:2)
this is not.
you could build a box with 50,000 monkeys in it to go get your CDs too, or hire an orchestra to recreate your music full-time, too.
on those, cost would also be prohibitive.
a "comparable" solution will have cd quality and mp3 cost.
What good is lossless storage of music??? (Score:2, Informative)
Digital out (Score:2)
There are plenty of sound cards with digital output. An optical cable goes straight from the card to your fancy receiver, so no information loss occurs before the signal reaches the amp. Even cheap receivers these days have very good DACs, so you can easily get all the way to the analog portion of the signal train with no measurable degredation.
An optical-out sound card runs about US$1000, which is a minor cost to an audiophile. Personally, I'm happy with 128 kbps compression and a pair of cheap headphones.
Re:Digital out (Score:2)
It does not, bottom end sound blasters are starting to sprout digital out. And it doesn't need to be optical either.
Dave
Re:What good is lossless storage of music??? (Score:2)
Re:What good is lossless storage of music??? (Score:2)
Dave
Linn (Score:4, Insightful)
In the meantime, there is the Sutherland 12dax7 system which works with any type of music on your computer for $1699 IIRC. www.12dax7.com
Nevertheless, it is good to see high-end audio companies paying attention to newer recording technologies.
$20,000? (Score:2, Troll)
Re:$20,000? (Score:3, Troll)
If you don't like listening to the true, unadulterated source, well, I guess tubes are for ya! Me, I like to hear what the musician played, so I buy transistor/fet based equipment.
Re:$20,000? (Score:2)
If DVD audio is to be believed, then you could record a dynamic range wide enough to capture a jet engine's loudness. This is not possible to reproduce on current analog equipment without distortion and serious damage to your hearing.
Isn't severe damage to my hearing the point? I -want- to hear those 105mm howitzers at real volume! Why else would I have that 5 meter subwoofer built into my foundation?
;)
Re:$20,000? (Score:2)
Factual Myths (Score:4, Insightful)
Facts. Tube amplifiers tend to give a more realistic presentation of vocals and soundstaging--especially depth. If, due to your preferred music, that is what you most care about, then tube amps give great value for money.
Facts. Simply listen on a good turntable: use your ears, and you will prefer vinyl. I have never met anyone who disagreed after actually listening. There are various theories as to why. (A) Vinyl has a greater dynamic range (you can hear ~20 dB into the hiss, which is ignored). (B) Vinyl allows much faster transients (the human ear detects up to 30 kHz, even though pure tones are inaudible above about 20 kHz). (C) Things related to Shun Mook and PWB (which seem to work, though I don't understand why). (D) etc.
Facts. This is really the same as above: CD has to throw away a lot of the information, especially getting rid of fast transients. The CD standard compresses music much more than DVD-A: so much so that the difference is audible (though "huge" might be exaggerated).
Facts. Anything in the signal path will cause some unwanted distortion, and so should generally be avoided. This is truly obvious.
In other words, the things claimed to be myths are largely true.
There is nothing wrong with being ignorant. There is something wrong with pretending you're not and promulgating untruths.
Re:Factual Myths (Score:2)
Guess what - vinyl is not more accurate than a CD. The fact that you and your cronies prefer to listen to records just means that you enjoy the audial artifacts that the arise from the vinyl process. You like the pops and the hiss and the warmth. It does not mean that the audio is more "pure".
Re:Factual Myths (Score:2)
What you're hearing when you hear CD as 'purer' is really the drying up of low level detail, particularly in the 3K area where the human ear is most sensitive. Vinyl has high but frequency-localized noise levels and is quite capable of higher resolution performance AT 3K, where the ear is particularly sensitive.
A CD really done properly doesn't sound 'pure'. It sounds convincing, and juicy/reverberant/lively/etc depending on the source material. Real world sounds don't sound 'pure' in the way that CDs do- that is a side-effect of a noise floor that is very different in character from analog noise.
Bunch of crap (Score:4, Insightful)
That's classic snobbism from self-declared "audiophiles". The truth is, 99% of people won't be able to hear a difference between a well-encoded 128kbp MP3 and the original CD. Of the remaining 1%, 99% won't be able to tell the difference anymore if the MP3 is encoded at or above 256kbps. And that's even with top-of-the-line amplifiers and speakers. It's the same kind of people who claimed years ago that vinyls were so much better sounding than CDs, when the truth is that the dynamics and S/N ratio of a good vinyl will never match that of a bad CD, and the only difference between a vinyl and a CD is the audio on the vinyl is compressed.
Those who really can tell a difference whatever the encoding are golden ears used as sonar officers in nuclear submarines, and professional audio testers in their anechoic chambers working for Kenwood, Denon and the likes. Is the poster one of these people ? not bloody likely.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
At any rate, audiophilia has moved beyond the CD to 24-bit/96KHz audio on DVDs or other media. The results, to my ear, are great.
Re:Typical 'audiophile' nonsense (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2, Insightful)
I've done quite a bit of listening and comparing CD source to compressed audio sources. It's quite apparent what's compressed and what's not. And it is more apparent on better equipment, despite what you say. The test rig I have setup is a CD player into a high-end 24/96 DAC and a sound card with digital optical out into that same DAC. Playing uncompressed music is basically indistinguishable from CD; playing compressed ogg at 220Kbps and MP3 at 320Kbps is definitely lower grade. At that bit rate, it's not the artifacts that are evident, but the complete lack of stereo separation. After all, correlations between the left and right channels is one of the means of eliminating "redundant" information and reducing file sizes.
I have also experimented with a bunch of the lossless compression formats. They sound fine, but I have concerns about software support for these formats, namely command-line players and cataloging software.
I am not a fan of vinyl, even on very high-end analog playback systems. Nor am I a fan of tubes. All digital and solide state for me. I agree with you on the dynamic range and S/N issue.
As a real audiophile, who's primary interest is music, not equipment, my advice is always: listen, listen, listen. For $20,000, I probably will be more interested in hiring a local string quartet to play private parties for me.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Now this I didn't know. I was assuming MP3 basically did a DCT on lumps of waveform and threw away the bits you couldn't hear. Has anyone done any tests on wavelet compression for Audio?
Dave
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
I could set you up with either a master that was indistinguishable from even 128K mp3, or one where you could tell it from even 320K blind every time.
For the latter- do a minimalist recording in a good hall, and listen specifically for soundstage depth. ATH level and psy model go straight for the reverberant field and throw most of it away. If ATH level's not up to the task you get a very shallow soundstage or a total drying up of reverberant information. If psy model is in effect you get twice as much of this, and it's got a weird unnatural quality. It's brutally hard to get soundstage depth out of an mp3, because if you have ATH threshold TOO low, the whole mp3 is used up trying to encode reverb information and sounds horrible and muddy.
For the one you can't tell between a 128K mp3- well, you could just do a lot of digital gain tweaking all on 16 bit busses for the maximum quantization error and coarsening of the sound, but if you think about it, it would be even more effective to just make the WAV the decompressed version of a 32K mp3 ;)
HTH, HAD...
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:3, Insightful)
Point taken for the "real" audiophile ;-) The problem I have with the Joe Bob "audiophile" is that he doesn't really know jack about music.
I guess the question is, what are you trying to achieve ? if you try to obtain the purest, most accurate reproduction of a musical artwork, the best thing is to sit at the concert, then the next best thing is to have audio equipment like yours, then things go down from there. But is this really the point ?
My interest is the pleasure I derive from listening to music, not the fidelity of the reproduction. I personally have a huge collection of everything from vinyls to CDs, including tapes, 8-tracks and cassettes. When I play an 8-track, I enjoy the music, but I enjoy it less because the sound isn't as rich as with a CD. When I play a CD, I enjoy myself and no reproduction defect (usually) takes some of the pleasure away. Well, when I MP3d my entire collection of CDs (128kbs), I sometime could tell there was a slight sound reproduction difference, but it wasn't worse, just different, and I derive the exact same pleasure from listening to the MP3s than from listening to the original CDs. And believe me, I'm not talking about Shitty Street Boyz, I'm referring to complex works like Ligeti or Xenakis (stuff I'm into).
The question you should ask yourself is : does listening to 96KHz 24-bit music honestly enhance your listening *pleasure* that much compared to listening to the same artwork at the standard 44.1KHz 16 bits ? I'm sure the fidelity is enhanced with your equipment, but is your listening pleasure enhanced by the same factor ? I've never listened 96KHz 24-bit music myself, but I guess conceptually it's the same question of enhanced pleasure between my 44.1KHz CDs and my 128kbps MP3.
If you honestly think listening to music from your high-end audio equipment is better than from standard good equipment, not because you know it's 96Khz 24 bits but because you get more of that nondescript feeling if your guts when you listen to it, then you're one of the lucky few with a very above-average hearing, and I'll consider myself one of the lucky few music lovers who have frugal technical needs.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Oh yeah: MP3 sucks ass unless you like voices oscillating across the image.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Did you try the obvious solution of encoding without channel coupling, or with lossless channel coupling?
Actually, up until the latest release (RC2), oggenc performed no coupling at all; it just encoded each channel as an independent stream. Nowadays vorbis supports a variety of stereo modes [vorbis.com], including two that disable all stereo-separation loss. [Note that stereo modes aren't user-configurable [xiph.org] in the released version of oggenc.]
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:3, Insightful)
That's classic snobbism from self-declared "audiophiles". The truth is, 99% of people won't be able to hear a difference between a well-encoded 128kbp MP3 and the original CD. Of the remaining 1%, 99% won't be able to tell the difference anymore if the MP3 is encoded at or above 256kbps. And that's even with top-of-the-line amplifiers and speakers.
That's funny, I have no trouble at all distinguishing differences among different MP3 bit rates and original CD's, even on fairly lousy computer speakers. On decent stereo equipment, the difference is pretty glaring. I have found that my personal minimum tolerable threshold for MP3 is 160-192 kbps for casual listening while I'm working or otherwise busy. For serious listening, I still go back to the original CD.
Maybe some people just hear better or at least differently. I know that I hear things that my wife and friends never notice, both in music and just ambient noises like monitor squeal and flourescent lights. Maybe I'm in your remaining 1%, but I'm no sonar officer or professional audio tester, "bloody likely" or otherwise. I just know what I can hear and what I like to listen to.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
True, if a blow to the ego (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
It's rather disingenuous of you to say that the audio on vinyl is compressed. It is, but not in the same sense as an MP3 is a compressed digital audio signal, so your statement is misleading. In this case it means that the dynamic range has been flattened a bit, and on pop music vinyl this was generally done to increase the average level of the music, based on the idea that louder music sold better. But they do this with CDs too [georgegraham.com] for no apparent reason, and to the detriment of the quality of the sound -- in fact, the practise erases the increased dynamic range that's the primary advantage of CDs over vinyl as far as I'm concerned.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
I have. Records sound like shit, particularly after repeated playing. The snap, crackle, and pop is dead easy to hear, and *entirely* absent from CD's.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
But at least you get a few good plays out of vinyl.(More actually, if you maintain it properly.) CDs start out by sounding nothing at all like live music. I know there are a great many people who can't tell the difference. You're one of them? Great! Just don't go around telling everyone who can tell the difference they're wrong.
FWIW, no sound system really compares with a live performance, which is why I don't really understand audiophiles who spend enough on their sound systems to pay a string quartet to give weekly performances in their houses. And much recorded music is so over-produced that the recording medium really doesn't make much difference, so in most cases the question is probably moot. But not always.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
1)this post should never have been mooded as troll.
2)I know quite a few people who can tell the difference between 128mp3 and cd. I also know people that can tell the difference between CD and Vinyl. Anybody who listens to them regularly can usually tell the difference.
3)most people don't care about that extra bit of quality, or they have never heard better, so it doesn't matter.
of course the whole original post was lame, because you could by many cd jukeboxes for 20,000 and not have to burn anything.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:3, Insightful)
Er, no. The CD has a frequency: it beeps 44100 times a second. The record player on the other hand is atomically granular - it plays whatever the atoms below the head is. S/N is severely lessened if you're using modern unit, especially a laser vinyl player.
Yeah, you're right - the overwhelming amount of people can't hear the diff, but I think you might not be 100% accurate about some of technical stuff.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Dave
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
I went shopping for some good but none the less low end HiFi with a few of my favourite CD's. Stuck them on the stuff I wanted to hear - a bit crap. Stuck on something else - a bit crap still. Suggested to the guy in the shop that perhaps the mastering on the CD was shite so he stuck it on a $25k system. Yup, still sounded shite. Precisely shite though.
And besides, nobody takes pride in their mastering anymore. Listened to the chemical brothers recently? Exactly.
AGGGHHH! God dammit record industry, stop suing people for sharing MP3's and start mastering really good quality DVD recordings. MY MONEY IS WAITING FOR YOU! COME AND GET IT!!!!
Dave
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
I'll assume you meant sampling rates, not bitrates, as you were talking about CD's vs. vinyl.
A 48khz sampling rate effectively implements a 24khz lowpass filter. Bass isn't affected. Ultrasonic treble is.
Re:Bunch of crap (Score:2)
Uh... Do you know anything about physics behind producing sound? 48kHz sampling rate gives you 24kHz lowpass filter. Any sampling rate more than zero gives you ability to save frequencies down to zero. I don't know about you but I consider less than 200Hz as low frequency and you can encode that perfectly with 400Hz (0.4kHz) sampling rate. About what comes to vinyl giving "more clear and natural bass response" you probably just like fuzzier bass more. Digital system can practically output square wave if needed unlike vinyl. Granted it doesn't sound "natural" but it's correct.
Also I highly doubt that you can get needle to move even 24kHz needed to be better than plain old CD in the high frequency end.
Re: (Score:2)
A cheaper solution.. (Score:3, Funny)
Thank you for trying our demo unit. (Score:2, Funny)
Dear CmdrTaco (Rob),
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Not Enough Storage (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if it were at a more reasonable cost, I don't see how it would be of use for anything but the moderate CD owner. Which doesn't make sense, given that the pricetag pretty much guarantees they're trying for the radio station market....
Re:Not Enough Storage (Score:2)
Better use for the technology? (Score:2, Interesting)
Great... a Linux box that contains uncompressed music. There are lossless compression formats, and they could be used to dramatically increase the number of songs stored on the system.
An interesting use for this kind of system follows: What I'd like to see is a machine that looks like a jukebox but is totally computerized. Instead of flipping pages, album covers and information would be displayed on screens. The audio would be stored in any of several supported formats on a RAID array inside the machine. Lossy and lossless compression would be supported, as well as uncompressed audio. (Leaving it uncompressed is stupid, in my opinion, as decompressing a losslessly compressed file will produce exactly the same information as no compression at all in the first place.)
Here's where my idea becomes interesting. Networking hardware would be built in, and additional screens, which would look somewhat like miniature jukeboxes, could be placed around the room, as in some restaurants. Internet connectivity would be possible, and would link the jukebox to a central resource, any of its mirrors, or any other site that supports the required protocol. You could conceivably select to play songs that aren't saved inside the jukebox at all! While other songs are being played (songs that were selected before your selection), it will download your song in the background (in a small-file format, such as MP3).
Songs that are seldom played would eventually be removed from the jukebox using a simple LRU (Least Recently Used) algorithm, unless they are marked as permanent by the jukebox owner, in which case they won't be deleted. Songs that are played often would be downloaded in a larger, lossless format during idle cycles, for better sound quality.
OF COURSE, THIS JUKEBOX WOULD RUN LINUX.
The main jukebox and smaller "consoles" that would be placed around the room would all accept money, just as "real" jukeboxes do. This would be a great product for bars and restaurants. (I often visit a nearby bar that has a jukebox, and there are plenty of songs I wish they had. This jukebox would solve that problem.)
OH WELL.
Get a Mac. (Score:2, Informative)
use 'shorten' - its lossless (Score:4, Insightful)
you'd be extremely hardpressed to tell the diff between a silver stamped cd going thru its audio chain and this setup as I described. in fact, my setup will be better, on average, since the audio alchemy (or even midiman) DAC will usually be better than the one built into your cd player.
Records (Score:2)
If your that picky, you should be listening to LPs, or tapes.
As the saying goes... (Score:2, Insightful)
$20k? You gotta be kidding.... (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Terabyte Fileserver [slashdot.org]: $5000
2. Turtlebeach sound card with optical out (SBLive won't do it; it resamples the data for no reason): $400
3. 'Ultimate Linux Box 2001' [slashdot.org]= $3200-$7000
4. Choice of storage formats: WAVs (Free[as in beer]:1250-1750 cds:lossless) MP3 (done proper) [r3mix.net] (Free[as in beer]:12,500-17,500 cds:lossy) Ogg Vorbis [ogg.org] (Free[as in speech]:12,500-17,500 cds:lossy), and FLAC [sourceforge.net] (Free[as in speech]:2500-3500 cds:lossless)
All this, 2.54*10^24 times more storage, and a set of components guaranteed to be better than what is in that POS that's being sold. Oh, and lets not forget the $7000 or so you'll be saving.
I'll pass.
Toodles
A cheaper solution.. (Score:2)
Re:Dead Tree issue? (Score:2)
Re:Audiophile... (Score:2)
The definition of Audiophile... (Score:2)
However, if you love music, instead of audio, you will insist on CDs, all other things being equal. Of course, there are classic recordings which were done the analog way, before digital perfection came along. Jazz lovers will have their Miles Davis recordings, and Beethoven lovers cannot live without their 1962/1963 recordings by Karajan and the Berliner Philharmoniker. But those true music lovers will have those classic recordings in digital format, preserved forever from further analog degradation.
Re:The definition of Audiophile... (Score:2)
"Infinite Resolution" my goatse.cx! (Score:2)
Re:The definition of Audiophile... (Score:2)
Re:The definition of Audiophile... (Score:2)
You "analog" guys speak of "infinite" quality, but conveniently forget the infinitely many dust particles around us. My own hearing is, according to the last doctor who examined my ears, somewhat better than average for my age. But I can hear very clearly the pops caused by dust in my exceedingly well maintained vinyl records, played in my top-of-the-line player.
Well, you may disagree, it's just a Shure V15 Type IV cartridge, none of your fancy moving coil pick-ups. The preamplifier and RIAA equalizer is something I designed and calibrated myself, I could never find a commercial preamp with a low enough noise figure, at any price. But why is it that I still can hear those clicks and hiss? Is it an aural illusion? And why is it that, when I digitize those analog records and do a Fourier Transform, I always find a ghost at 2x frequency? Is it harmonic distortion or is it some sort of evil digital cereal that got into my calculations?
Re:Audiophile... (Score:2)
Re:My disappointment with the quality of digital (Score:3, Interesting)
The solution, of course, is to dump your vinyl to digital and burn it to CD, giving you the best of both worlds. Well, ok not exactly, but the vinyl -> CD sounds a heck of a lot better than these digital -> CD facsimiles they pawn off these days.
Now, to put this post ontopic, how do you spend $20K on a setup like this? Especially since it's just a PC with some nice audio and lots of hard drives.
Re:SACD's ? (Score:2, Informative)
However, there is little motivation for people to discard their CD's to upgrade to (similar looking) SACD's, and most people are not willing to pay the extra money for an SACD when a CD suits them just fine.
From what I have read (I haven't listened to them yet), SACD's do make a large improvement in sound quality over CD's when used with a good stereo system. The problem is (1) whether the average listener will notice and (2) whether he will actually pay more money for them.
Crossfade (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Crossfade (Score:2)
Well I tried your suggestion, but I still can't listen to Zappa albums without wanting to throw things (computers, speakers, cookies) through a window.
Re:What if I don't like the CD sound? (Score:2)
Amen to that, my brother! A couple of inches in the mike position, or one dB in mixing, makes more difference than the one between a $300 or $30000 playback system. I have often wished I could have a good way of pumping up those strings or taking down that percussion...
I think true experts wil lnot fall for that "analog is better than digital" song, but, for untrained ears, the noise in analog recordings may sound, let's say, more familiar. Some years ago, I was helping a friend of mine in a post-graduate work on voice compression for telephony. Although his compression scheme didn't eliminate any information in the voice signal, listeners found it "unnatural sounding". The solution was to add a certain amount of noise to the reproduced signal, because people just expected to hear a faint background hiss in a telephone call.