James,
I would have to agree with many of the pessimistic comments about the CD-player/transport idea, ... I'm sure Bryston could make a bang-up unit, but I think that you guys might be better putting your energy and talents into an external DAC/digital switching unit, with USB and/or FireWire connectivity to plug your computer into. A good number of people would run out of digital inputs on a DAC-enabled BP-26 almost immediately. And while I'm interested in both the Bryston pre-amps and an excellent DAC, but I feel reluctant to get those in the same box just for flexibility's sake.
In this sense, this unit would be to digital audio as the Video switching unit is to the SP 1.7 (which I thought was a really wicked idea btw)
So give it a whack of digital inputs, Toslink/Coax SPDIF, USB and/or FireWire (full-size ports please, not the mini ones) maybe some more obscure ones depending on demand (AES/BNC whatever) and then have analog outputs (XLR balanced/RCA unbalanced) and it would be nice to also have digital outputs as well, so that the unit could serve as a translator from one format to another in the case where someone wanted just to use it as a switch to a further downstream DAC.
Bryston name, Bryston quality/build, Bryston warranty, Bryston commitment to customer service and who knows maybe future firmware/hardware upgrades to potentially salve some of the burn from all these damn format changes.
More and more people are moving to a "media-server" type approach to music, since now that we've been collecting CD's so long it would take a damn room to hold them all. Personally (and like others) I've been encoding ALL my CD's in a lossless format on my computer. And computer here doesn't have to mean "crappy Dell with a garbage sound card", many of us - perhaps yourself too - have put together really custom PC systems with top notch components and dead-silent power-supplies/heat-sink cooling etc.
Anyway, that's just my 2c.
If you guys are dead-set on making a CD player, I'd suggest transport-only, and I would further suggest seeing it if is possible to interface with a computer (ie. USB/FireWire). There aren't really any high-end computer CD-ROM's (for those of us who do extract our music digitally) that this might be an interesting option. Perhaps bundle with the amazing Exact Audio Copy program, not sure if the author would be willing to entertain such a partnership:
http://www.exactaudiocopy.de