>John van Ommen wrote:
>
>> >> drive, whereas I listen to MP3 CDs on my laptop almost exclusively.
And of
>> >> course, a hard drive would have *much* lower jitter than a CD-ROM,
because
>> >> it's a much more stable mechanism.
>> >>
>> >
>> >Ummmm, ever heard of a thing called a "buffer" ....
>> Some output devices are better than others. You may have a
buffer, but how
>> well does it work? You're not seriously saying you can't hear the
>> difference between a low-jitter, well engineered CD player and a $80 Wal
>> Mart special? My Harmon Kardon only cost $105 but it clearly sounds
better
>> than your average CD player. But it doesn't sound as good as my Echo
MIA.
>> According to the documentation on the modest ($200) Monarchy Audio
Digital
>> Interface Processor, jitter is reduced by about 90%. And believe me, you
>> can hear a difference immediately. One thing that is very interesting
about
>> this change is that it's not very dependent on your speakers. I've
hooked
>> up the D.I.P. to Cambridge Audio's $80 set of multimedia speakers and
heard
>> a notable difference (they have a digital input.) Naturally, the
difference
>> is even more pronounced on my 'real' speakers.
>>
>
>Yes. But why are you claiming that all CD-ROMs have cheap and nasty
buffers,
>and that all hard disks have top of the line buffers? The purpose of the
buffer is to
>remove the instability in the mechanical system, and then the timing of the
data
>is *only* dependant on the read clock to the buffer itself.
>I agree, I can hear the difference between a cheap & expensive player, but
it
>is not due to jitter. There are many more components after the buffer that
are
>much easier to stuff up.
Actually, it's not that hard drives have a better buffer (thought it's a
given they have a MUCH larger buffer.) It's that the hard drive mechanism
itself is waaaay more stable, and therefore much less likely to require
error correction. And therefore, the data being streamed to the buffer is
more stable.
>>
>> >> Bottom line is that your MAD setup may sound good now, but you'd be
amazed
>> >> how much better it CAN sound.
>> >
>> >If you're into maximum quality, why are you even bothering with lossy
>> >compression?
>> >
>> The same reason EVERYONE is into MP3s. You can download them for free
off
>> the internet!? doh!
>
>Complete with patch and parrot :)
>I have personally found mp3's off the net to be of low quality, usually
poorly ripped,
>and seldom well encoded, even at a decent bit rate! Very dissapointed with
net mp3s.
>You only get what you pay for!
>
I get most of my MP3s off of Usenet, and I find that the ppl who are willing
to go to the trouble of posting on Usenet actually take a lot of pride in
their RIPs. They even boast about what they used to rip & encode. Not to
mention some also rip off of vinyl, which is a lot of work.
I used to rip my own MP3s, but after 2-3 years of ripping, I'm finished
nearly all of my CDs.
>>
>> I'm being sincere when I say a good MP3 rig can give CDs a run for their
>> money. I'll admit they don't have as much resolution, generally. And
CDs
>> have more 'air' in the soundstage, due to their superior channel
seperation.
>> But a lot of the irritating aspects of CD playback such as the timing
errors
>> and the crummy treble is NOT present in a MP3 that's being played off a
hard
>> drive on a good (24/96) soundcard. Getting the timing right really makes
>> the music 'swing', especially if you're into rhythmically intense music,
>> like rock & roll, electronica, or hip-hop.
>
>A *good* mp3 (rare from the 'net) sounds very good. But even with my bunged
>out ears, I can hear the artifacts present in a 160kbps mp3 encoded direct
from
>a CD. That bitrate is slowly becoming more popular on the 'net, but good
>encoding is also required!
>
>What if you rip a .wav from the CD to the hard disk? Does it sound like the
>original... or has the 'jitter' disappeared?
>
I'd expect that it *would* sound better. But I don't want to offer a
opinion until I do a A/B comparison. Generally I play CDs on my CD player,
and the MP3s on the PC. Same amp & speakers. I'll copy a wav to HD and see
if it sounds better than the original CD, that would be educational.
>>
>> >PS: CD's are mastered for price, not quality. Check out how many newer
CD's have
>> >*serious* clipping. All the tubes and monster cables you like won't make
your
>> >end of the chain fix those ruined links at the start (screw-ups -
deliberate or
>> >otherwise - during mastering).
>> I don't agree that clipping ruins a mix. I've clipped mixes on
*purpose*,
>> because it can produce a lot of interesting effects. I listen to mostly
>> electronic music, so I'm pretty comfortable with outrageous mixing.
>
>Yes! But mixing for effects is different than mixing for a 'minimum'
distortion
>master. If the original is not clipped, you can always add clipping later
to your
>hearts content... but not the other way around :)