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Hi Guys, Any PC users here?
No problem with kernel streaming and the Tranquility dacs. In order of quality from lowest to highest, here's what I've used with an old Asus Eee Box running XP Home:asio4all, usb-asio, foobar's internal kernel streaming, and foobar KS in combination with the AQVox asio driver. Even asio4all is a large improvement over direct sound, but is otherwise pretty far behind the other options when it comes to sound quality.HTH,Jim
Hi Chad,Well, I don't actually know. I suppose a stripped down version of win 7 could be installed on the Asus if you were dedicating it to audio, but I haven't tried this myself. The newer Asus boxes as well as the Acer Revo seem to be coming with win7 basic. However, I don't actually know if wasapi will be an improvement or not. Some people I've talked to think that it's not all as simple as switching to wasapi and all your troubles go away and your system sounds like you just dropped another $50k into it.The 2010 mac mini with Mach2 mods does that .There are demos of usb-asio and aqvox asio, and it won't hurt to give them a try to see what you think. Some folks do not like the aqvox driver, but I think it sounds quite good with the Tranquility or SE, but there are so many variables it's hard to predict how it will work for you. The asus box has not had the full treatment as far as stripping down the OS yet, and then there's still the SSD and linear psu to try. All it takes is money... and time -- both of which are at a premium right now.-- Jim
It's not the OS that makes the mac operating system the better choice it is the availability of the better players on the mac OS. ThanksBill
Bill, et al:You really owe it to yourself to try Audirvana as may be found in the following link:http://code.google.com/p/audirvana/It, like Ayrewave, is free. Be sure to look under "Audirvana" in the menu at the top margin and under "preferences" as it will not default to an external DAC for playback. Please also note it requires OS X 10.6, and I prefer it in 64 bit mode. To my, as well as several others ears, it betters Ayrewave, representing the best sound available for a computer.All this may change as various playback software packages mature; but, it is genuinely exciting times for computer audio!Enjoy,L.D. Moore
Thanks Bill, I have read the whole thread and it is more out of curiosity than skeptisism is why I ask. If it was the OS then the Mac Book Pro would have the same gains as the Mini. Now the RFI point you make, makes the most sense. So this RFI interference would be coming from the computers various processes, fans etc to the output of the computer USB into the dac where the interference shows up, correct? Bill, I am not doubting the superiority of the Mini due to it being a quieter (interference wise) machine, but I am also wondering why someone cannot come up with a cheaper method of eliminating these interferences that make the difference on all computers, I will probably eventually going with a Mac Mini, but would rather stay with what I have which is the pc. Bill I wonder what difference this would make, I may check this out to see if it makes any difference. it is a very low noise power supply (inserted just before the usb cable enters the dac) and if you read down the page it explains what kind of "rippling an noise" it eliminates.
So would it be wrong to assume that all the advantages to the mini mac would be in the lack of "noise", whichever kind, generated from the hardware and layout of the Mac Mini into the Dac. Do you think this is where the Mac Mini has the advantage over PC'S and other MAC's?