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Using the Modwright Transporter and loving the sound and the whole transporter interface and features. It's hard to imagine going back.
Reader Charlie S. wonders what you use for digital music these days? What is your <I>primary</I> digital front end?
Apple TV. Sure it has its audio and video codec limitations, but who cares?! Anyone in love with their MUSIC and itunes (like me) just rips everything to Apple Lossless, outputs hdmi or optical and calls it a day. At $350 it's likely "too affordable...read: sonically inferior" of an option for many audiophiles, but my music sounds splendid and I'll never go back.
CD and Music Server. I have two Meridian 500 MK2 transports, I have six Denon 5000/5001 (one controller/five slaves (100 discs/2 CD transports each)) changers filled with CDs made on an Alesis Masterlink 9600 disc recorde,r and now I have Sonos. I don't care about iPod. Listening to music is not entertainment to me, music is an art form to me, just like with movies.
I use a Sonos system with either A) the online music service Rhapsody, or B) a 2TB NAS drive filled with my CDs ripped at full rez (AIFF). My normal method of finding and collecting new music is to hear about new music from a friend, publication, or radio, and then find the music on Rhapsody, if I like it enough to own, I buy the disc from a local bricks and mortar store, rip it to the NAS via iTunes, then play it back on the Sonos. Have been a dedicated audiophile for almost 30 years yet have played and enjoyed more music since acquiring the Sonos than ever before and friends absolutely love coming around and discovering new music through Sonos & Rhapsody. Quite possibly the best piece of audio gear I have ever purchased. It fundamentally changed the way I find, acquire and listen to musicall for the better.