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I just want MUSIC.. Who cares if it has a digital output? My ears have no digital input, thanks.
Sony has finally released SACD hardware, and DVD-Audio is promised for sometime next year, but none of the first players have digital outputs. Is this a problem for you?
I am SICK of these guys WHINING about piracy!!! I have a CD-RW at home and rarely use it. I compile my own discs, I make MP3-to-CD copies (but I don't pirate), and I back up data. MiniDisc technology is even better for the mix-it-yourself crowd. All of these technologies rely on being able to digitally copy music cleanly and easily. Digital outputs are essential to anyone who wants to do any home recording! The people these companies are worried about are the mass-duplication folks out in Hong Kong and China. Well, these guys copy first and worry about quality later. Do you think they mind when they downmix an analog signal back into digital for duplication? Do you think the average purchaser of these pirated goods cares? Hell NO! They only care that they can get the latest Backstreet Boys CD for $3! Or the latest Hollywood blockbuster for $5! Quality takes a backseat for these people. What Sony and the rest are actually doing is depriving us of the freedom to copy what we want when we want. If it were up to the recording industry, we would NEVER see DVD-R in the home! They HATED the idea of VCRs being able to record copyrighted material off TV. New digital copy protection will severely limit our ability to record programs in the future. It's all about control, and any way the industry can limit our choices, they will use. I advise people to NOT buy these devices until they provide the features we want.
If it's an SACD player, it won't make much difference to me whether or not the digital output is theret. My concern is always how good the analog section sounds. SACD and DVD-A won't mean much if companies release products with low-quality analog parts.
What's the point if you have to reprocess the signal to get something other than 2-channel playback? The copyright concern is simply nuts. People have been copying 16/44 music for years, the mass market thinks MP3 sounds good, so who cares if 24/96 copied to a CD sounds a bit better? Folks are still buying music. The hardware guys are pretty craven, in my view, to buckle under. The music and movie software industries are in for a tough time and will need a new economic model, with or without digital outputs. I say good riddance.
What a asinine question. You people are idiots! It's this very kind of mentality that prompted me to cancel my sub just a few weeks ago. Don't any of you have an idea of what we (audiophiles) want? An outboard DAC is a must for any of the main steam players! And probably for most of the so call high-end stuff. Does anyone at this rag have ears? Where is the reviews on the (now defunct) Pope recordings? In some ways Pope got it more right then ANY recordings I have heard to date! Granted I was only a subscriber for a few months, but most of the issues I have read, have managed to piss me off in at least one article, if not more. If any of you really care I will expect to hear from someone personally. As far as making the full data stream available at the digital outs, Pioneer is the only one I know of that has gotten it right! The sample rate and bit depth is only limited by software, AS IT SHOULD BE! You see hear is a very important service a mag like Sterophile could provide. Which releases on DVD-A offer the full data stream? Like Pioneer does in hardware? Chesky and Classic do! I would kill for music recorded using the technique that Gene Pope uses! Only at 192k/24bit! I would gladly pay for such recordings. Say 20 - 30 bucks a crack. (Gold foil of course) Vic victor@networkusa.net
I have invested a lot of money in an external DAC that will decode higher-sample-rate material, including SACD when a standard is ratified. I don't want to throw that investment away, and feel that the copy-protection issue is simply a smokescreen.
If I'm going to purchase an SACD player from Sony, I'm going to have to leave the D/A up to the company that came up with SACD in the first place. It'll be a while before we see any offboard processors that are any better than what Sony offers.
I won't buy SACD/DVD-A till: 1) there's a healthy variety of high-end hardware for it on the market; 2) I can get a player or separates combo that will play all three: CD, SACD, and DVD-A; and 3) the price of such wondrous machines begins to descend.