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Interesting thoughts by Srajan regarding interfacing analog sources.
I have to disagree about the price -- I think the thing that's expensive is the software. The hardware is some cost, but the cost of developing software far outpaces the cost of developing the hardware. When I was a practicing EE, I spent countless hours designing software for a system that used two DSPs, and these were tiny, no-function things at the time. The DEQX far outclasses what I did. They have to recoup their development costs somehow.
I'm not ready to ditch my modest vinyl rig and record collection.
Assuming a man-year to develop the s/w. The s/w equates to ~$375K at a fully loaded cost of ~$200/hr.
Here is my stupid question, and I'm not trying to be funny. What would the DEQ allow me to do that I can't do with the DCX?
What would the DEQ allow me to do that I can't do with the DCX?
... What would the DEQ allow me to do that I can't do with the DCX?
2. The DEQX's FIR dsp filters are arguably preferable to those IIR filters used in the DCX2496 for the purpose of speaker correction. Above around 400hz, the phase coherence offered by a FIR filter can be audible.In the realm of room correction, which best takes place in the below 300Hz, the phase coherence offered by a FIR filter is, to the best of my knowledge, not audible. The parametric equilization(s) used for room correction whether it be analog (Rives), FIR (DEQX) or IIR (Behringer) is not an issue of theoretical, aesthetic, or marketspeak 'better', but dependant on the quality and care of implementation.
In the realm of room correction, which best takes place in the below 300Hz, the phase coherence offered by a FIR filter is, to the best of my knowledge, not audible.
I'm just a Program Manager for a defense firm and if my s/w engineers took more than a man year to solve their DSP issues I'd find new ones.
or perhaps I'm used to working with a different level of s/w engineers