Yes good points. It could very well not be the bdp at issue at all. I may have been refering to the quality of the Omega and it's output and not the bdp1. The more i think about it the coments were probably addressing the lousy HD and its usb output quality. I can't see Bryston under engineering anything.
Sorry James if i had misdirected my reactions when it was very likely the HDD.
Quoting James above "I realize it is not for everyone but computers are very noisy devices – both electrically and mechanically as well as operating systems that are designed to do many things beyond playing music files".. and also the comment about Byston being stupid... I wont go that far but....
The problem is.........USB cables have a very short length limit... and sure you can get extenders BUT these extenders are not certified for USB HD. The cost of a reliable extender that supports a USB HD is in the 100's of dollars.
For my two cents worth, several points.
- While the concept of James to not need a PC for playback is good, technically you do need a PC at some point.... cause you need to rip your CD's... so there is no escaping the PC and therefore some PC skill are needed
- The concept of not needing a PC in the "direct" playback chain by using USB drives is again good, but see my point about the limited length of a USB cable (and also the lack of a quality mandate in USB devices)...So this means you are almost always forced to have the USB HD in the listening room and potentially have wall warts connected to the same outlets as your equipment.
So... in my view another combination to support would have been to use SAMBA. This would work as below:
1- You rip your CD's to a PC HD and thats where they stay
2- You connect the BDP-1 to your home network via an ethernet cable (which can be run many many metres)
3- You configure SAMBA on the BDP-1 to see the PC and the ripped content
4- away you go
5- You can still have the USB HD options as it stands today
This maintains the concept... and its better because it is techincally not possible for noise to be transmitted over Ethernet... you get any noisey PC stuff (computer/USB HD's etc) out of the room... and with a nice skinny ethernet cable you have no length limitations.
Peter
PS. and of course NAS is conceptually similar to the above... and what I have described is a poor man's NAS.. because you use what PC "stuff" you have today