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I am wanting to put together a music server using either an inexpensive laptop, or solution utilizing a Raspberry Pi, Beagleboard, or something along those lines.What software do you feel is the best for this? Rune, Player, Foobar, etc.If you know any good sites that would help, let me know.I have a DAC. I am looking for something to host and play the music.
FLAC is best.
The benefit of the laptop is not needing to run the music server headless. This would get you up and running quicker, allow for easier tweaking of playback, and not limit your software choices as much. In the long run, a headless server is a cleaner solution, but it took me a while to settle on software and controller options.I recently went through the process of re-ripping my CD collection since it was mostly mp3 from the iPod days (also, being a college student). I settled on ripping everything to AIFF using dBpoweramp. AIFF is lossless with metadata and can be used nearly universally (player and software). It is possible batch convert with dBpoweramp so I didn't sweat the format much.
I've read someone saying that WAV files are better - so if you don't have a gazillion CD's, I'd think it'd be best to do that - since they take up much more space.
Best Buy has an Asus laptop on sale this weekend.http://www.bestbuy.com/site/asus-15-6-laptop-intel-celeron-4gb-memory-500gb-hard-drive-chocolate-black/4831400.p?id=bb4831400&skuId=4831400Any thoughts?
If you don't need the CPU power, celerons are great since they draw less power = less heat and noisy fans. I dont know how well windows works on them, but I have a chromebook with similar specs (android or linux based) and it is fast enough for normal internet, netflix, audio etc. Also take a look at the smaller boxes used for HT setups having the same type of processors since that will allow you to maybe ditch the fans completely. My personal recommendation is still running a headless setup that you can control via a tablet or phone. It's not that hard and there are many good setup guides. I'm using the raspberry pi as the streaming interface. My music is on a separate computer (nas server) and I control it via my phone or browser on another computer. This allows me to hide away the big power hungry computer with fans in another room, and only have the tiny raspberry pi hidden and completely silent behind all my stereo equipment.I know it's not for everyone, but there are many similar preconfigured solutions as wellBtw: unless you take care with how you power the laptop, fans and hardrives, you may actually find it to be equal or even better audio performance using the chromecast than feeding the dac from the laptop due to the fans and hardrives power spikes. That was at least my experience when comparing the chromecast vs. using an old laptop.