0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic. Read 368416 times.
Can someone explain what this tweak for the Mac means:Shutting down all other operating systems running in the back ground improves the sound (considerably).I only run one OS on my Macbook. Could it mean shutting down other applications running on the machine like finder or a web browser?Recently heard the dac in question with a few others. Nice piece but only had about 24 hours on it. I am sure it will sound much better when it is fully burned. Folks heard bigger differences in the IC we changed than the DACs under test. Very fine lines of differentiation on a short eval.
And for the PC users out there, I've spent the las 5 or 6 days with the AQVox ASIO driver and found it to be a significant step up from all the others -- asio4all, usb-asio, and Foobar's Kernel streaming.
Guys:There are reports surfacing that the latest Mac Mini with internal power supply is sonically superior to the previous models. I own a 2009 Mac Mini with a SS Internal Drive and 4 GB of Ram. Last night I discovered on the Apple Core Circle discussion about a tweak to make the 2009 and 2010 Mac Minis run as 64 bit machines. I followed this link: http://blog.leanopen.com/tag/64-bit/ I discovered my Mini is running as a 32 bit machine and will have to follow the instructions to make it run in the 64 bit mode. Many folks have performed the tweak and claim it makes a huge difference to sonic performance from the older Minis.I would like to know if any of you Tranquility Owners are running your Minis in the 64 bit mode and can report on the sonic differences between 32 bit and 64 bit?Thanks,Ken
Thanks very much for taking the trouble to post this.
And for the PC users out there, I've spent the las 5 or 6 days with the AQVox ASIO driver and found it to be a significant step up from all the others -- asio4all, usb-asio, and Foobar's Kernel streaming. More air around instruments, more detail presnented in a very organic way, better top-to-bottom balance, ambience retrieval, soundstage, and even better tone and dynamic contrasts. Not cheap at $126 but very much worth it to my ears.Works great with Tranquility and when you buy ghe key you also get access to version 1.0.3, which is more up to date than the demo 1.0.2.This is the only usb driver I know of that communicates directly with the usb chip in the computer and bypasses everything else.I haven't got it to work with my HRT MusicStreamer II+ yet though, but that will be connected to my linux box for my headphone rig anyway.-- Jim
Regarding hacking the Mac Mini to boot the 64-bit kernel:I gave it a try. The instructions to change the efi file worked fine. The instructions to edit the plist file were wrong and overly complicated. Apple provides a much easier command line entry to do it: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3773I wouldn't recommend doing it at all, however. I booted into 64-bit mode (confirmed in System Profiler), and the sound quality was worse. The highs were a bit rougher, and things were not as rich and musical. It certainly didn't improve anything.So I checked the Applications list, and iTunes is a 32-bit application. Booting into 64-bit certainly isn't freeing iTunes to do anything better. The other system components are a mix of 32 and 64 bit, but it doesn't seem to help the sound quality to have them running under the 64 bit kernel.Your mileage may vary, but I would avoid it. All my files are in AIFF format, so iTunes is doing very little work to get them out the door to my Tranquility DAC as it is.
Are you using only iTunes as your music player and library manager? Or are you using something like Pure Music, Play, Amarra, etc. as the player and using iTunes only as the library manager? I'm not doubting your findings, they are what they are. If you say it sounded worse to you then I believe you, and I have not tried this myself. But in my case, where I use Pure Music as the player and only use iTunes as the library manager I'm not sure that iTunes is playing ANY part in the sound quality.
WGH, yes, sorry, forgot to mention this is all with xp.
I am running Pure Music in Hog Mode and I made the change to the 64 bit mode this afternoon. I did not listen today in the 32 bit mode and all I will say is that I have no negative comments to make about listening in the 64 bit mode. I believe there is even more detail and life to the music. I recommend you try it!Ken
Pure Music seems to offer a free trial, so I may give it a shot. It won't be for a while, though, since I have a new amp and preamp coming and want to understand their affect before I tweak iTunes.Are your files in Apple Lossless, AIFF, WAV? I'd be especially curious to try Pure Music if you're hearing a difference with your music files in AIFF or WAV format because my expectation has been that if iTunes is doing no work in decompressing the files before playback then there is likely little benefit in using add-on software with better mathematical algorithms for handling the file output. I'm open minded on that, of course, and I'm always happy to improve the sound (even where I don't expect it--case in point being the not subtle improvement I noted above from the dB Audio power cord for my Mac Mini).
When I purchased The Tranquility Eric recommended I compare ITunes, Pure Music, Amara and there is a free program that I cannot remember its name. Most of the guys on Computer Audio with Macs seem to be running Pure Music. I tried it and felt there was a definite improvement over ITunes. Please note I am running Pure Music in Hog Mode!All of my files are .aiff!Good luck,Ken
This could be a good option for people locked into XP or want to build a stripped down box like you are. I had been using XP with usb-asio but now use a networked Toshiba laptop running a 64 bit Vista with WASAPI and like the sound better.Looks like I'll have to try out the demo and see if I hear any difference between the AQVox ASIO driver and WASAPI on my XP and Vista computers which go to a HagUSB --> AVA Insight DAC.I was thinking if the sound is similar most users would be better off upgrading their OS to Vista or Windows 7 and using WASAPI for the same price of the the AQVox ASIO driver. I still like and use XP on my main rig but it is getting a little long in the tooth and needs a good firewall and antivirus to be secure.Wayne
I initially imagined that upgrading to Windows 7 and using WASAPI would be the better option as well. But I guess we won't really have any indication until someone has run the comparison. That's why I think Jim should get a second, identical PC and load up Windows 7, so he can conduct a controlled experiment for us.Thanks Jim!Chad