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I'm helping my friend set up her first two-channel system, and gave her a set of Audioengine A2+ for Christmas. She has a MacBook Pro running iTunes, but mostly streams Spotify to a sound bar (insert favorite crime against humanity here). My solution for her with the least expense while maximizing both fidelity and convenience is to recommend Tidal premium and get an Audioengine B1 Bluetooth streamer to go into the speakers. Alternatively, I could give her my set of old polks and buy a few components from Schiit. We'd like to keep the whole thing under $500, but the speakers whether passive or active are already paid for. Any other suggestions?Thx in advance
IMO Tidal Premium is too expensive.
Out of curiosity, what is it too expensive compared to?
Compared to Tidal's standard stream. I wonder if the OP's described system will benefit from the higher quality/price stream?
I use Spotify Premium + Chromecast Audio. I couldn't be happier with them. I'd challenge anyone listening to a system that cost less than $5,000 dollars to try to tell a difference in sound quality between spotify premium and lossless source material
I use Spotify Premium + Chromecast Audio. I couldn't be happier with them. I'd challenge anyone listening to a sub-$2000 system to try to tell a difference between spotify premium and lossless source material
Review of NAD D 3020 by Sam Tellig. http://www.stereophile.com/content/nad-d-3020-integrated-amplifier-sam-tellig#KPr58vzPTb86Sk3X.97
This is an old thread but I thought I would chime in for the benefit of other readers with similar requirements.If you are looking for a streaming audio solution, definitely consider a Chromecast Audio. At $35, you probably can't do better. It streams over your wifi, uses the Chromecast app which will support almost all your audio sources. It also supports high res audio, has optical and analog out (has a fairly decent inbuilt DAC). Another nice thing is that it will stream directly from the source, bypassing your phone, so your phone only acts as the control device and does not become a bottleneck or another component in the audio chain.
That is indeed a limitation. But to be honest, no other streaming solution is going to support this kind of "direct from source streaming" from an embedded browser app either.