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Hi Eric,I am excited about Tranquility dac and looking forward to audition. Based on your posts you were bias towards mac mini and iTune as a source. Is there any specific sonic advantages over other options such as Linux or Windows and foobar. I have embedded device which runs linux os and has USB. I want to use this device as source. Will it sonically different form using mac mini with iTunes?
Or you could just buy a Mini...no work or computer science classes needed
I received Eric's tips for tweaking the Mac today and having followed his steps earlier this evening I must say I'm impressed with the results. I wasn't expecting such dramatic improvement. Thanks Eric. Wow.
I still don't understand why anyone would pay $1495. for a DAC that only does 16/44, only has a usb input, no remote, when the same money buys a Wyred 4 Sound balanced DAC-2 with:Robust 35A Schottky bridge rectifiers (same as used in the STP-SE)*88,000uF of filtering with Wyred 4 Sound low ESR "super-caps" (same as used in the STP-SE)*upgraded VFD display for input, sample rate, volume control, and configuration viewing*Remote controlled preamp capability*Defeatable - 32 bit volume control*HT Bypass inputs (selectable via DC trigger)*1x AES/EBU input*1x Balanced I2S input via HDMI cable (not standard HDMI cable format)*24-bit 192kHz Asynchronous USB input* Proprietary drivers for 32/64 bit Windows XP, 7 and Mac OS 10.4, 10.5 ,10.6
Have you even listened to either of the units you are citing? Or does what it sounds like not enter into your decision making process?
I believe he has a legitimate value prop question there. At this point it is a $2000+- product if a Mac is required to make it sing. Someone with a Windows machine, of which I have 5 in the house, who can use an existing SB and associated software with existing FLAC files and playlists and achieve similar results is scratching their heads. It's not practical, from an investment in time and money, to have to purchase those other pieces (MAC and monitor adapters) of equipment and change your file system (iTunes or whatever it is) just to see if it sounds significantly better. That, I believe, is creating a dilemma for some of us.
With all due respect I think we're talking about two different things.1) The value of the Tranquility compared to the value of other DAC's.2) The question of which computer system produces better sounding music, Mac (in this case a Mac Mini) or PC.Regarding #1 - I don't think it's very fair to make ANY claim about it, good or bad, without ever even hearing it.Regarding #2 - I don't think the claim has ever been made that the ONLY way to get excellent sound quality from this DAC is with a Mac Mini. It has been suggested however, that to get the BEST sound one should use a Mac Mini vs. a PC. But I have seen that claim made from both camps regardless of which DAC is being used.From my own personal experience, I have used this DAC with a dedicated PC and never once thought, "Jeepers, this sounds like crap. I need to get a Mac." Much to the contrary, a PC is what was used through the process of my discovering what an excellent product the Tranquility is in the first place. It was only "suggested" to me that a Mac Mini would give me even better sound for a number of reasons that have everything to do with computing issues and nothing to do with the DAC itself. Computer audio is a new thing for me and I want it to sound the best it can within the parameters of what I can afford. It was important enough for me to try the Mac Mini, the first Mac for me too in a house full of PC's. Now that I've lived with the Mac Mini in my system for awhile it is my opinion that it DOES sound better than the PC rig i was using. But even at that I never did think the PC sounded BAD. I just think this sounds better. But that has nothing to do with the DAC.Just my 2 cents.