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Jtw......But you miss the point, completely. The resolution will keep on increasing until digital has turned into an analog wave, which is what we already have. It's just in a different format. Therefore, the goal of digital is to become "analog", because that is where it came from!Wayner
Well, konut, I'm certainly not going to pick apart everything that you say, word by word, but you want some proof about high-res never good enough, well there is already material that is avalible in limited selections, much higher in resolution. I believe I saw a 384/24.They are simply filling in the space of an analog wave with more numbers. More numbers in the same amount of time means faster machine. That may mean that the 192/24 stuff will become obsolete.Wayner
I can't believe no one has quoted my impassioned response and picked it apart! Paul
It's all about what is important to you as an individual.
For me, when I am collecting vinyl, archiving it, cleaning it, buying it, what have you...I am an audio archeologist. Just picked up a Columbia 2-eye red label Moby Grape Wow from the late 60's and I am holding a piece of history. To know that the record was engineered by the original guy from the original master tape and is an original pressing is important to me.
I don't care if I have to get up to change the record. It's good exercise. And I don't need to digitize it and pump it into every room in my house. Listening critically is a luxury, I do it from my favorite chair in my favorite room when I have time to savor the sounds.
If you go to other websites, such as stevehoffman dot tv, you will see frequent threads on "what's the best CD of this or that album" all the time. They have remastered the hell out of certain music, brickwalled it, made it worse, from who knows which master tape in who knows what condition by who-knows-who. The music is too bright, has too much bass, blahblahblah. Many times the "answer" about which one is best is...the original vinyl!
Now maybe one could argue that currently recorded music is done digitally so why not get the best resolution digital out of it...I still don't care. If the record is important to me and it's on vinyl I am likely to buy the vinyl copy anyway.
My answer to Wayner's question is "yes." The "but" comes in when you figure out who you as an individual listener are and what is important to you. The fun thing about this hobby is that it's so many different things to so many different people .Paul
My digital system sounds better than your analog system so suck it! Yes I'm talking to YOU the person reading this.
If you're older and have always had some sort of vinyl collection, I could see making the growth of that collection your priority
It's not even close to mine, but that's ok. My digital front end is ok too.