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I think that high-end audio dealers and customers would not accept it. We would need dedicated components that are exclusive to the format.
Apple's OS X and Microsoft's Windows Media 9 Series both support 96/24 PCM audio. What do you think is the potential for high-rez digital to suceed as a computer-based format?
Hands down, no contest. Even without these players, you have Winamp and others already having the capability, plus all sorts of software DVD players that already do 96/24. They will all converge as all in one multimedia (DVD and music) player. It's inevitable.
I think that 96/24 audio has a much better chance as a computer-based format. It's usually the hard-core gamers that push their systems, insisting on the best graphics and the best sound. With Media PC gaining more popularity, I feel it is only a matter of time before traditional electronics start seeing steeper declines. I'm not really totally a hard-core gamer, but I had reconsidered getting a second smaller A/V system for the bedroom. My PC now serves as the centre-piece. I've got PVR, DVD, & CD functionality all in one piece, plus a high-end gaming machine. I quite enjoy the audio quality of my Creative Labs Audigy 2ZS soundcard. I find it's a lot better than most of the cheap CD and DVD players out there. And it's got 96/24 support, which is my current setting. The computer method is also more user-friendly as all the processing can be done inside the PC, rather than requiring an outboard decoder.
For creative professionals, high-rez on the computer is in the bag. As for the consumer side, it's dead as a door nail. When computer users can easily and cheaply transfer audio from their Macs and PCs to their stereos, then it may take off.
I'd be more skeptical of this if my younger and more technically savvy friends weren't setting up PC servers to distribute audio throughout their homes. The problem is they're distributing audio files they've acquired for nothing from sources like Gnutella and they're playing them back over really cheap, awful sounding hardware. I can imagine them downloading higher-rez audio files if they can hear a difference, as long as they don't have to pay for them. I cannot imagine them acquiring high-end audio gear to play them on.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can not make it drinkor so the saying goes. This saying is apt because while the capability may be embedded into Mac and WinTel software, consumers need a reason to utilise the capability. Give consumers high-rez downloads and consumers will begin to use the capabilities of the software. Unfortunately, content providers are loath to give anything approaching Red Book quality downloads, let alone high-rez. As we all know, the content owners are worried about piracy, but if you remove the incentive for piracy, then the problem has been dealt with. So, I want to see reasonably-priced high-rez downloads of material that is of interest to me. If the content providers, software companies, and download sources can provide this, then I am certain that consumer interest and dollars will follow.
Most online consumers are happy with the current Apple encoding, or low-rate MP3. I do think though, that as more of us get broadband in our homes, and demand it, that online sites will provide the high-rez format (as long as there is copy protection).
When the majority of computers have lousy speakers and the majority of computer users think MP3s sound "as good [sic] as CDs," there really should be no market for it. After all, these users will not want to waste space on their portables' hard drives when squeeze a zillion MP3s onto one!
I believe this is exactly what will happen in the long run. The fact that consumers can't find SACDs in retail stores or the SACD players, is really pathetic. I completely agree with one subscriber's comment that Sony is not fully supporting its own format with easily obtainable hardware or music in retail outlets. I, for one, am real tired of dropping big bucks on formats that don't cut the mustard, and are discontinued within a relatively short period of time. I made the Beta mistake, which cost me approximately $1000 and I am fearful I have made a similar $3200 SACD mistake, as each month goes by! I absolutely love the format, am completely satisfied with this new level of recording technology, but am now beginning to believe this may be a short lived format as well. I certainly want to see SACD succeed, however, as we have seen in the past, the best technology does not necessarily survive in a market willing to settle for mediocrity.
Are you guys kidding? As a computer professional I know that most computer oriented people (geeks) care as much about quality sound as Helen Keller. They think high bit rate MP3's are the bomb. They listen on speakers and equipment that an audiophile wouldn't bother with and have no idea what a soundstage is. Anything that requires more HDD storage space has no chance at all. Only those few who were/are audiophiles first will bother with a high-rez format. As for the rest, cramming as many "tune'z" as they can on their ipod's is all they care about. How often have you heard " I have eleventy thousand tune'z on my ipod"? Even when they are exposed to quality sound they remain uninterested.
Perhaps someday, but the supporting technology is not yet ready. A high-rez album takes up far too much storage space. When terabyte storage comes to home computers then you might have something. However, there is still the problem of how to prevent noise from the computer interior from polluting the signal.
Isn't that being driven by DVD format compatabillity as well?? I just got a new Dell with a THX approved soundcard. In theory I could use the digital output on the card to an outboard decoder or use the onboard one. All I would need to do is use the 5.1 analog inputs on my reciever and hook this up to my sound cards analog 5.1 outputs. Have not tried a DVD A but the card can record and process 96/24 PCM. Cost of the upgrade was about $80.
It depends. If it turns out that all music downloads are high-rez, and the high-end industry embraced the idea of a high-end hard-drive playback system, then it would probably do fine, even good. One of the biggest things audiophiles needs to get over is their whining about digital and computers. It isn't the most ideal thing to me either but it looks as if we have the inevitability of a download future. That said, hopefully hard copy recordings and vinyl still stick around. I like the fancy packaging that I can get with some of the more creative artists out there. Ultimatly, however, it's all about the music, and for us, the quality as well.
Asking that, for me, is like asking if a great work of visual art can be appreciated as well in a shopping mall as in an art museum; It may be fundamentally the same object, but how I get there and what I pass by and what I am surrounded by (context) makes a big difference. Computers already hide in my audio equipment and the more hidden they are the better. As long as computers require that I march lockstep down their minute menus or tell me that the bold new future comes from intangible downloads, I will resist. I want to browse my collection on my own, not with Microsoft's help.