Hi All,
We will certainly do our best to accomodate all our customers in a fair and reasonable way going forward. It is true though that the SP3 is a much more complicated and sophisticated unit that the pevious SP1.7's and SP2's.
james
Thanks James!
I am looking forward to hear which options will be available once the SP-3 is available. Then everybody can make their individual decision.
Is Bryston making progress on the development of the SP-3? Will the Cedia EXPO see a working prototype (or even a release candidate) of the SP-3?
Chris told me on the High End in Munich in May that Bryston had hired another software specialist...

Well, on another sibject, I think it has been discussed in this thread that the SP-3 will have some kind of room correction. I can't, however recall whether a decision had been made regarding the system. If I remember correctly, Trinnov and Audyssey have been mentioned as options. Has a decision been made in that respect? Or has Bryson (like Anthem) developed their own room correction?
Is the front and back panel design as published appr. a year ago (and shown a few messages above) still the current design? Maybe I am dreaming that one up, but wasn't there a mention that the design has changed since then?
Regarding the HDMI question(s), I am not so keen to get HDMI 1.4 (which is unlikely to be included in the SP-3 anyway), but to get a working implementation on HDMI 1.3 with fast switching times. There are implementations out there that use a single HDMI receiver per input, in contrast to a single receiver chip that 4 or 8 sources are switched to. The advantage of the one chip per input approach is that the switching unit can maintain the connections to the different devices so that it hasn't to do all the HDMI/HDCP negotiations every time an input is being switched. The result is supposed to be lightning fast switching times.
As for the USB discussion, the bandwidth of a USB 2.0 port should be more than enough to send a high quality audio signal through it. So I don't see the neccessity for USB 3.0.
Anyway, I don't expect Bryston to be the very first to implement new technologies. But I do expect Bryston to deliver exceptional audio quality and usability with the product. There is number of companies out there that throw new technology onto the market (in the media player market, I am thinking about Syabas with their Popcorn Hour devices or HDI with their Dune HD line) and release products to the public with the latest chips and/or amazing capabilities. At the same time these products, despite the cutting edge features they offer (or because of them), have shortcomings with respect to reliability or even basic functionalities.
Bryston's approach has worked well so far, for Bryston as well as its customers.
Cheers!
Markus