From How Stuff Works:
"In analog technology, a wave is recorded or used in its original form. So, for example, in an analog tape recorder, a signal is taken straight from the microphone and laid onto tape. The wave from the microphone is an analog wave, and therefore the wave on the tape is analog as well. That wave on the tape can be read, amplified and sent to a speaker to produce the sound.
In digital technology, the analog wave is sampled at some interval, and then turned into numbers that are stored in the digital device. On a CD, the sampling rate is 44,000 samples per second. So on a CD, there are 44,000 numbers stored per second of music. To hear the music, the numbers are turned into a voltage wave that approximates the original wave."
What this means is that until the numbers of the digital signal are converted back to a analog voltage wave via a D/A converter the only thing that matters is that the signal be transferred.
Maybe this is my my CD player recommends using a digital connection to my receiver rather than analog. At my equipment level he preservation of the analog signal isn't able to match bypassing the component all together and "shortening" the path of the analog signal.
"In analog technology, a wave is recorded or used in its original form. So, for example, in an analog tape recorder, a signal is taken straight from the microphone and laid onto tape. The wave from the microphone is an analog wave, and therefore the wave on the tape is analog as well. That wave on the tape can be read, amplified and sent to a speaker to produce the sound.
In digital technology, the analog wave is sampled at some interval, and then turned into numbers that are stored in the digital device. On a CD, the sampling rate is 44,000 samples per second. So on a CD, there are 44,000 numbers stored per second of music. To hear the music, the numbers are turned into a voltage wave that approximates the original wave."
What this means is that until the numbers of the digital signal are converted back to a analog voltage wave via a D/A converter the only thing that matters is that the signal be transferred.
Maybe this is my my CD player recommends using a digital connection to my receiver rather than analog. At my equipment level he preservation of the analog signal isn't able to match bypassing the component all together and "shortening" the path of the analog signal.