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Peter (Blue Smoke Audio; creator of Black Box music server) believes Wavpack and WMA are superior to FLAC cuz FLAC decoders are asynchronous?? Dunno any more than that.. I don't know. I rip to both (wavpack for hirez, FLAC for redbook). I do think I can tell the difference between server side and player side decoding, as sated in the Discless Forum (thread about SC 7.4).However, the Audiogon test is really a comparison of EAC and Itunes as a lossless ripper, not really of format differences. It is the conventional audiophile wisdom that EAC rips to bit perfect, if set correctly, and that iTunes is a relatively miserable ripper (compared to EAC, Plextools, etc.), even when set for error correction. It's error correction and read-until-right capabilities are not robust enough for anything but nearly perfect discs, IMO.
Quote from: ted_b on 14 Feb 2009, 05:54 amPeter (Blue Smoke Audio; creator of Black Box music server) believes Wavpack and WMA are superior to FLAC cuz FLAC decoders are asynchronous?? Dunno any more than that.. I don't know. I rip to both (wavpack for hirez, FLAC for redbook). I do think I can tell the difference between server side and player side decoding, as sated in the Discless Forum (thread about SC 7.4).However, the Audiogon test is really a comparison of EAC and Itunes as a lossless ripper, not really of format differences. It is the conventional audiophile wisdom that EAC rips to bit perfect, if set correctly, and that iTunes is a relatively miserable ripper (compared to EAC, Plextools, etc.), even when set for error correction. It's error correction and read-until-right capabilities are not robust enough for anything but nearly perfect discs, IMO. Again, not the same Peter. No relation whatsoever. They do share the same first name.I'm not sure if you understood the comparison on the Audiogon thread I referenced. The file that distinguished itself above the others was ripped first as a WAV file in EAC, then converted to lossless in iTunes. In doing this all content info (album, song, date, etc) is lost and would need to be manually added afterwards. This file sounded superior, to my ears, as well as to Peter's, to a WAV file ripped in iTunes with error correction, as well as an Apple Lossless file ripped in iTunes with error correction. If you have a PC with EAC do the experiment yourself and post your results. I found it very difficult to believe there could be any difference in any lossless files until I heard it myself. What I heard was better definition of instruments defined within space, cleaner vocals and better bass. Mostly an overall improvement in soundstage definition. I tried the same files downstairs on my much less resolving office system and could not hear any difference between the three files.
Marco, an interesting and probable more relevant comparison for TP owners would be to also include a FLAC file ripped using EAC.My understanding of the experiment is the same as Ted's - it appears to demonstrate the inferiority of iTunes as a ripper.
Again, we should prolly take this ripping and format wars stuff to the Discless circle. Marco, your orphaned question was about Apple Airport. There is an Apple Circle (The Apple Core) here that would have had a few hits, hopefully. I know nothing of Apple Airport, but assume it's WEP uses the same 8 or 10 digit encryption pwd as the rest of your router/network.
Marco,I apologize. I spend sooo much time in the MW TP tube rolling thread that I just assumed this was it. No, no reason to feel defensive or that you've abused the thread at all. My bad. This thread IS, indeed, all about the idiosyncrasies and other wonderful technoid issues that us MW TP'ers come across, and your WEP stuff is right there with the rest. However, once you see you're getting no responses, a good idea is to reword more topically to that thread (i.e not specific to TP) and then repost in a niche Circle. (Note: the moderators frown on a simple double post, i.e copy and paste, to broadcast to multiple Circles).
Marco - it;s probably a left brain/right brain issue.With you being a creative right brain guy then you go down the Mac path, whereas left brain PC guys need all the logical analytical skills to get EAC configured to rip CD's Now that the right brain guys try to be analytical about ripping, with all these experiments, then it all goes pair shaped as they try to figure out whats going on I just switch from right to left and get even more confused At the moment they're many conflicting opinions on what are the best options to rip and encode, many of these are put about by industry manufactures and industry groupies with no supporting analysis. Another variable is wireless or ethernet, ethernet is claimed to be superior sonically but this is countered by the left brain guys claiming it's the same 1's and 0's With all this confusion any attempt to structure a comparison using two ears is welcomed by me - PC or Mac.
I want to try the experiment outlined by Peter_S, Dtc, et al, which Steve had urged me to do weeks ago. In my case, I can rip on a PC using EAC, but would then want to move the file to a Mac for iTunes playback since that is my music server platform. Seems to me this hardware/OS platform change introduces a significant additional variable. Have others of you crossed platforms in your tests, or kept it all on PCs?Marco: am I correct that Slimcenter converts all files to FLAC for transmission and the Transporter then de-compresses? How might that factor into the results?(snip)
At the moment they're many conflicting opinions on what are the best options to rip and encode, many of these are put about by industry manufactures and industry groupies with no supporting analysis. Another variable is wireless or ethernet, ethernet is claimed to be superior sonically but this is countered by the left brain guys claiming it's the same 1's and 0's With all this confusion any attempt to structure a comparison using two ears is welcomed by me - PC or Mac.
Here's another consideration and question for you TP users, that may have some impact on what's going on here. I'll just quote from the post to the A'gon thread for those who are not following it:QuoteI want to try the experiment outlined by Peter_S, Dtc, et al, which Steve had urged me to do weeks ago. In my case, I can rip on a PC using EAC, but would then want to move the file to a Mac for iTunes playback since that is my music server platform. Seems to me this hardware/OS platform change introduces a significant additional variable. Have others of you crossed platforms in your tests, or kept it all on PCs?Marco: am I correct that Slimcenter converts all files to FLAC for transmission and the Transporter then de-compresses? How might that factor into the results?(snip)Can anyone tell me the answer to the SlimServer / FLAC question Drubin poses here?
Quote from: Marco Prozzo on 14 Feb 2009, 06:25 pmAt the moment they're many conflicting opinions on what are the best options to rip and encode, many of these are put about by industry manufactures and industry groupies with no supporting analysis. Another variable is wireless or ethernet, ethernet is claimed to be superior sonically but this is countered by the left brain guys claiming it's the same 1's and 0's With all this confusion any attempt to structure a comparison using two ears is welcomed by me - PC or Mac.To my ears, the ethernet connection sounds better. Well worth the $10 to buy a 75' ethernet cable. George
Quote from: zybar on 14 Feb 2009, 06:39 pmQuote from: Marco Prozzo on 14 Feb 2009, 06:25 pmAt the moment they're many conflicting opinions on what are the best options to rip and encode, many of these are put about by industry manufactures and industry groupies with no supporting analysis. Another variable is wireless or ethernet, ethernet is claimed to be superior sonically but this is countered by the left brain guys claiming it's the same 1's and 0's With all this confusion any attempt to structure a comparison using two ears is welcomed by me - PC or Mac.To my ears, the ethernet connection sounds better. Well worth the $10 to buy a 75' ethernet cable. George+1