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You sound like everyone who doesn't believe that SACD is a viable format is 'Joe Consumer', and only You, The Englightened One, know the Truth.
I think 16/44.1 was adopted because that's what fit on a CD at the time. Any more than that, and you'd have to have two disks for one CD/album, which wouldn't be a good thing. Plus, the theory is that as long as you sample at twice the Nyquist frequency (40kHz), you can have perfect reconstruction of the signal. You don't -- so theory goes -- need any more than 44.1kHz.I think while DVD-A (of which I have one CD, just to test) and SACD might go away, home theaters will not. If anything, I see home theaters becoming more prevalent. How many houses now have "media rooms"?
Yes, to fit Beethoven 9th symphony, that was Sony's stated goal (forgot which particular performance they had in mind). Another interesting tidbit I've heard is that initially Sony wanted to use something like 12 bit resolution, not exactly state of the art, if you wish. Took them some extra efforts to get the target length *and* 16 bits. As to Nyquist, this often misunderstood 'Nyquist theorem' --- well, if you ever took the iintro course on Signal Processing, the proof of this theorem is simple and s ...
Why do you think that turntables are selling like hotcakes?
Let's see.... Beta, minidisc, SACD ... I've said it before, I will say it again: "anyboy who trusts Sony for anything is just pissing money down the drain".
who cares about sacd other than the fools who bought a player-suckers
Even if SACD sounded better then redbook, which it does not why would anyone invest money in this technology? The recording industry is in business to make money just like any other business. Do you think that they do not look at detailed reports of SACD sales, growth in the market, etc? ...
Beta, minidisc, SACD ... "anyboy who trusts Sony for anything is just pissing money down the drain".
Remember that beyond sound quality, SACD was being marketed as a multi-channel audio format. With the growth of 5.1 HT sound systems, it was certainly one of the things Sony thought people might want.
I am not impressed. ( Never heard DVD-A- but don't care about surround sound just like I didn't care about the early 4-channel surround sound either ). It's a cool gimmick- but it's not for me.
Yes, to fit Beethoven 9th symphony, that was Sony's stated goal (forgot which particular performance they had in mind). Another interesting tidbit I've heard is that initially Sony wanted to use something like 12 bit resolution, not exactly state of the art, if you wish. Took them some extra efforts to get the target length *and* 16 bits.
Who here remembers the "Elcassette"? Yet another failed Sony hi-Fi format.