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Reviving an old thread -- does anyone have any screen shots for what JRiver for Mac looks like in action? Am thoroughly fed up with the iTunes/Pure Music interface (and the associated Mavericks screen sharing bugs that go with it) and want to try something else. Am told that JRiver is a lot more hassle-free. A few more questions:1. Is there a good thread to follow for tips/tricks using JRiver?Steve Ted_b's thread here: http://www.computeraudiophile.com/f11-software/j-river-tips-and-techniques-user-experiences-repository-13684/2. How is JRiver 19 at this point? Is it worth waiting for Version 20.....whenever that comes out?19 is very stable, and you won't have any issues. I made the transition from Pure Music to JRiver two years ago and have no regrets. It is especially great for DSD.3. Is XLD the best ripping software to use since JRiver doesn't provide ripping capability?Not a clue, but I'm sure someone will chime in.4. Does JRiver automatically sense your DAC capability and set it to output a higher sampling rate? Or do you need to set it manually each time you want to adjust sampling rate?You need to select the source but all the sampling is automatic. If you start using DSD, you'll probably end up setting JRiver to upsample everything to double DSD.Thanks, -dB
As a work around, I bought Windows 8.1 and installed it via bootcamp. Then just added JRMC to try out. Just on the JRMC learning curve now.Kenreau.
Lokie,There are invisible legs like mine. I've been reading, but not posting cuz I've no experience, but I'm hoping to make fewer (or zero) mistakes in setting up my new Mac Mini music system. My take is that JRiver seems to offer the best system, but that it is less than perfect. Anyone know (and can post) on why iTunes isn't ideal?Michael
For best sound quality I use Audirvana Plus. It's Mac only, and it reads the iTunes music database. I rip everything to AIFF format (preserves all the metadata like artwork, artist name, track number, etc.). WAV does not preserve metadata and FLAC and Apple Lossless place a burden on the Mac to decompress the file during playback which degrades quality (in my experience). So, I open the AIFF files in iTunes and have iTunes set to copy to music folder. I can import the AIFF files from any place onto my dedicated music hard drive this way.When playing music I have iTunes closed and just use Audirvana Plus (nothing else running and the Mac optimized for audio playback--for example background processes such as Spotlight are turned off). I do not use Audirvana's "iTunes integrated mode." I turn that off. Audirvana lets me load the iTunes music database and add songs to the playlist. The "+" at the bottom of the Audirvana screen lets me add files to the playlist--when you click "+" it opens a file window, and at the bottom of that window on the left is "Music". This is the iTunes music database. Open that and search for whatever you want (album or artist or song). Select what you like and add to the Audirvana playlist.Audirvana Plus has the best music playback algorithms on the Mac. I've tried everything and it's the best (to my ears). It's also reasonably priced. Have fun.
I was hoping this thread would have longer legs. Anyway...Could someone comment on using M4's or other Apple Loss-less formats in JRiver? Non issue?