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OK, so who's going to be the one to convert a disc from WAV to FLAC back to WAV back to FLAC etc a hundred (or more) times or so and do some bit-for-bit comparisons and listening sessions?Seems like the more tech-savvy of you could whip up an automated system to do the conversions.It'd be good ammo for one side the argument to show that the 1000th conversion is bit perfect and not audibly different.-Mike
While I'm curious about all this, I'm not that curious because hard disk space is so cheap these days. We'll do our best to get to the bottom of this as time permits and both Chris and I have a lot of research to do.
so for now, I'm just saving files as .WAV until the controversy subsides.
Quote from: TONEPUB on 22 Feb 2008, 06:41 amso for now, I'm just saving files as .WAV until the controversy subsides.This would be my recommendation, too, EXCEPT there is a huge elephant in the room with .wav files: tags are not preserved. When one has a gazillion songs without tags, the world can be a very, VERY cruel place
After reading several reviews of the Nova Physics Memory Player, several questions come to mind which you gurus can take a crack at:1. To get at all the data residing on a CD, Mark turned to a process he calls "Read Until Right," or RUR. Well, simply using the EAC solves that problem (and cheaply)2. Mark's next step is to get rid of the data that have to do with the Reed-Solomon Error Correction Code (RS-ECC). ?? Is this relevant and if so, what if any shareware exists to make this correction?3. The last piece of the MP process is the flash memory. As data, using the RUR process, is retrieved it is stored in an electronic, or flash, memory and not on a hard drive. In his investigations, Mark discovered that data read from a hard drive directly will exhibit higher levels of jitter. If however, the data is retrieved from a flash memory, it is far less tainted and practically jitter-free. Okay, but don't most DACs deal effectively with jitter and to what degree is this necessary sonically? And if so, how does one bypass HD storage in favor of flash memory... Anyway, what is irritating about this particular review is that he was using various DACs as well! Furthermore, the player does not come with a good remote but a laptop. Rrrrr... http://www.positive-feedback.com/Issue28/novaphysics_memoryplayer.htm
Quote from: Geardaddy on 22 Feb 2008, 04:20 am2. Mark's next step is to get rid of the data that have to do with the Reed-Solomon Error Correction Code (RS-ECC). ?? Is this relevant and if so, what if any shareware exists to make this correction?To answer the last part of the puzzle: I believe this a red herring. There are 1 and 0s which were burned on to the disc to begin with, and those 1 and 0s can be read reliably and repeatably by computer-based error detection and correction software and firmware, as has been discussed. So finding a better way to deal with error correction codes on the disc itself - assuming NP have done this - is an academic exercise at most. I believe it doesn't achieve a better result.Darren
2. Mark's next step is to get rid of the data that have to do with the Reed-Solomon Error Correction Code (RS-ECC). ?? Is this relevant and if so, what if any shareware exists to make this correction?