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The sound quality of the digital out seems very good into my Tact equipment. I haven’t done any critical comparisons yet (still letting the circuits break-in). I plan to follow-up with a couple friends, comparing the Musica to my Pro-2m philips-based transport, both on their own and with a Genesis Digital Lens in between.
First, I must admit, I have not yet hooked up, or felt the need to hook up, my Musica to the internet, or my computer. Hey, that’s why I bought it, and I suspect, why many purchasers will buy it. I had previously purchased a Squeezebox and had it modded, but the Musica just seemed like an easier and more elegant solution, and was potentially as good (or better) sounding.The attraction for many is three–fold:1) To take advantage of the error/jitter-reducing capability of playing music from a hard drive. Using the digital output, this puts a relatively inexpensive music server in league with multi-buck transports.2) To have your entire music collection available on screen (albeit a small one at present), organized into genres and playlists. The promise of a PDA-style “remote” to view/access this collection from the listening seat is certainly mouth-watering.3) To be able to avoid computer/networking hassles if one wants. This is what sets the Olive products apart from the Squeezeboxes and USB converters.At present, I’ve loaded 440 CDs on the hard drive and have used just over half the available disc space. I listen to (already loaded) CDs as new ones load and convert to FLAC, and don’t have any problems with noise or drop-outs. I can skip songs easily, forward or back, one at a time, only needing to wait (less than) a second between presses, with almost instant access (faster than some dedicated CD players).The sound quality of the digital out seems very good into my Tact equipment. I haven’t done any critical comparisons yet (still letting the circuits break-in). I plan to follow-up with a couple friends, comparing the Musica to my Pro-2m philips-based transport, both on their own and with a Genesis Digital Lens in between. I have found the Musica pretty intuitive so far, and like the dual jog wheels. All one has to do is cycle through them when new and familiarize yourself with the various options. I’m sure it will get more complicated when I get down to creating playlists, but my music has already been automatically partitioned into 64 different genres, and can be accessed alphabetically by artist or album. The headphone out is decent through my Senn 600s and the volume is easy to access and use.All in all, so far, this is one of my best audio purchases in years, excepting maybe my recent purchase of a second Tact 2150 at the summer-discounted $1600 price, so I can biamp and use digital crossovers in my line arrays.
The hard-drive in operation is indeed inaudible from outside the chassis. My particular experience in my review relates to headphone listening over a Symphony that very likely suffered a sub-optimal or defective hard-drive. In that case, the hard drive was audible over the headphones between tracks, during cue-up and while importing data and also as a constant though subdued HF whistling. Mind you, my particular application (headphone listening and making CD compilations using headphones) will not be how most listeners will use their Olive products.Cheers,Srajan
First, I must admit, I have not yet hooked up, or felt the need to hook up, my Musica to the internet, or my computer. Hey, that’s why I bought it, and I suspect, why many purchasers will buy it. I had previously purchased a Squeezebox and had it modded, but the Musica just seemed like an easier and more elegant solution, and was potentially as good (or better) sounding.
He had numerous issues with it—and much difficulty interfacing with his (idiosyncratic) ISP. While I appreciate his forthright and honest appraisal of his frustrating experience,
Once Vinnie gets my machine back to inspect it, it could well turn out that I had a bad CD/ROM drive (or, more accurately, one that went bad in transit from the US to Cyprus since it obviously must have worked fine when Vinnie dispatched it). In fact, that seems to be Vinnie's suspicion at present since the machines he's modified so far all have proven extremely reliable, quiet and fast. So old Murphy messed with the review process as is his want...
The PDA interface would solve all that and eliminate the need to integrate the Olive into a computer network. That, I think, would be slicker than shit
Can anyone tell me more about the promise of a PDA style remote??Thanks!
Is there a reasonably objective way to express the level of mechanical noise from the Olive's hard drive? In an otherwise "quiet" room, when the level is at its loudest, at what distance is it audible? Or should this distance be measured w/ an SPL meter in an anechoic room & be stated in the specs? Does HD noise vary between samples? If so it's something to consider before purchase depending on how important it is to the buyer.
I am the owner of a Red Wine Audio modified Olive Musica (Battery Powered)plus a battery powered 16 Gig outboard Hard Drive that I hook up through the Musica's USB port. Several items need to be discussed.
4. The sound of the RWA Musica is organic, rythemic, and full. You may feel there is somthing missing until a note, a transient, a crescendo is called for in the music. Then it is there in all its glory. The Musica does not call attention to itself, however you can clearly hear the differnce between Amplifiers, cables and even various vibration reducing devices. (Footers). The Musica is far from perfect, and I expect it will get better over time with new software and new innovations. Between Vinnie Rossi and the Musica I am really involved (deep in) in my music.
All,Regarding Srajan's review, I want to point out a few things:1) Yes, Srajan experienced networking issues trying to network to his wired Ethernet connection (not wireless). He could not get them solved and I know he made a big effort to do so. This is certainly a problem because he wanted to be able to view the Olive screen on his computer (via a web browser). His review mentions the difficulty he had and we all can appreciate his upfront and honest discussion of this. His review makes it clear that Olive needs to add more content to their User's Manual (which needs to be downloaded and printed out, and Srajan pointed out) in regards to networking. Not everyone is going to have a "1..2..3..done" experience with networking, wireless or not. Networking can be a total pain in the butt! I am in no way a networking pro...not even close, so I couldn't be helpful in getting Srajan up and running with his wired network
The Olive is interesting, but I have a few concerns. Are the hard drives user replaceable? What happens when one crashes- is all your music gone? Is there any way to connect the Olive to your PC, or am I stuck re-ripping my entire collection yet again? Does it have any installers backdoors (ie codes, ability to be controlled by a Pronto/etc, 12 v trigger)? The thing doesn't look like a great value- I about went into shock seeing that stepping up from the Opus with the 400 GB drive to the 750 GB version cost a THOUSAND FRIGGIN' BUCKS! Is there seriously nothing but another $350 GB for that grand? Holy cow!Still, it's intriguing. I'd love to learn the answers to the above; it would be sweet to have all my music on a machine like that instead of having to use the PC, in a way. Provided there was a way to back up my music and swap drives myself.