0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 9920 times.
Jerry you have made an unsubstantiated statement. Conversely the Virgil Fox recording,The Fox Touch on the Crystal Clear labelhas frequencies down to 16Hz at substantial volume.
I switched to computer playback of wav files from ripped CDs about 3 years ago and I thought I was a late adopter. Scotty
Yo, sound stimulates air in waves and arrives in waves. Digital is about bits. How does that compute (no pun intended)?
Welcome Peter. Glad to have you onboard. You using "Gizmo" on the tablet?Also check out "Unified Remote". You can use your tablet as a touch screen mouse to peruse the collection of tunes on JRiver as opposed to being stuck with the Gizmo app.Bob
Galaxy Tab 10.1 is looking good, but I'd sure appreciate reccomendations on that and remote software as well.
Peter,what format did you rip your CDs to? I have about 400CDs ripped as Wav Files and they take up about 350G of 500G external hard drive.Scotty
I've watched my fair share of technological water pass under the audio bridge. Having lived through things like 8 track tapes (bought many), cassettes (also bought many), vinyl (I still have every LP I ever bought), I've become a cautious and plodding adopter of new formats. I still remember buying my first CD player and having the store owner welcome me to the twentieth century, even remember the first disc I bought.I passively watched MP3 players shoot up in popularity and services like Napster wreaking havoc. Reading about the decline of audio quality and ambivalence of the buying public, I found myself clinging to my CD collection while dismissing it all as not worth persuing. I've had several phones with unused MP3 players, (ok, I ripped one disc just to see how it worked!). I just generally avoided what appeared to be a lossy and unsatisfactory musical experience. I read much here and other places, somewhat torn between my jaded view of digital storage and playback and what appeared to be a better way that addressed my sound quality concerns. As my knowledge of a better ways of doing things (software and hardware) grew, I decided to get on the train...late...as usual.Which brings me to the point of this diatribe. I've started ripping all my discs onto external drives with dbpoweramp and using JRiver to view and playback. Soon I'll build a server like CAPs, invest in a good D/A converter, and control it with a tablet. I've been dreaming about this for two or three years and now that's it's starting to materialize I have to say:This is so cool!Having this kind of access to my music collection is nearly intoxicating to me, I'm completely jazzed. I know what you're thinking, so let me save you the trouble, "welcome to the 21st century, Peter"Better late than never...
Ripped to FLAC, lossless level 0 in dBpoweramp. I'm following methodology prescribed by this articlehttp://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/309-computer-audiophile-cd-ripping-strategy-and-methodology/Gees, I hope I haven't screwed something up here...
Are you sure you've got all the files selected when your computer is telling you 1.4 GB? it isn't just one artist?I agree with the others and SRB's math, you should have larger files. highlight one track, and see what the properties are, making sure it is being read as a FLAC, which should also have a percentage of the original file size/ percentage compressed.let us know!todd
Enjoy it while you can. In a year you will be scrolling through a thousand albums and won't be able to find a thing to ware (hear). I swear, sometimes I scroll through and get to the z's and have to start over again. I can go to the CD rack or start flipping through LP's and pick a few no problem. Maybe it's just me.