Unorthodox Behaviour wrote:
Very good card but quite expensive. I just discovered OPTOplay in http://www.audiotrak.net/eng/index.html
Some of these USB audio dongles seem to have rather substandard codecs. Particularly the Philips uda1331 chipset has rather high distortion at low scale range.
The Burr Brown/TI PCM2702 looks quite a bit cleaner but it only renders 16 bits and is just a DAC. Still, a really nice package solution.
If any MAD-user knows an even cheaper 24 bit solution, please inform us - it seems that these new USB devices are the future of digital audio "cards". I expect that costs for these gadgets will reduce dramatically since there is no PCI bridge chip involved, no big PCB etc - just the DSP chip, audio stream to serial data converters and plastic parts.
Maybe at some point, but I haven't found integrated devices which generate/accept SPDIF data. Thus I suspect devices like the OPTOplay are a vendor engineered solution and not a carbon copy implementation of a chip vendor app note.
With the proliferation of low cost USB devices, it will be interesting to see whether isochronous USB will become more of an audio interconnect 'standard' compared to more specialized interfaces such as SPDIF, etc.. The PCM2702 is under $5/unit in production quantity. I can believe a $10/unit BOM cost is possible. I have not seen SPDIF solutions even get close to this.
-john