Guys - just for history. Apple introduced FW400 - it was very cool at the time since we were living in the bad old days of SCSI.
But the WinTel world (remember that) didn't like it (OK they hated it) because they had to pay a royalty for each computer equipped with FW.
So they backed USB. And pretty soon USB was ubiquitous and FW a niche product. Remember we are talking a global market here which is what put USB over the top. I suspect there are a 1,000 USB machines for every FW machine and that might be conservative.
Later USB 1.1 begat 2.0 and soon there will be a 3.0. There are also five iterations of FW by now.
As long as we are using RedBook and 24/96; speed is not an issue - the audio files are very small, while cache, RAM and busses are very fast. To be sure an old PC which is asked to do some other processor intensive tasks at the same time or whose HD is an overloaded nasty mess may have some trouble keeping up. Same for a 386 PC that is being asked to upsample. This is one of those fascinating things that the bit biters like to bring up over and over but one never finds a concrete example of... YMMV
FWIW the general consensus seems to be that while we can agree that FW is a much better format then USB for some things, the war is long over and FW is and will remain a niche product.
Consider that many of the newer Apple Notebooks like the MacBook, the MacBook Air and the Mac Mini don't come with FW. No argument that its a way to control costs - but it reflects the fact that no one uses it.
There is a reason that Steve, Gordon and most everyone else designs for USB - it's what people use. Which is why that is most likely where the innovations will occur. And is most certainly the choices are.
But the WinTel world (remember that) didn't like it (OK they hated it) because they had to pay a royalty for each computer equipped with FW.
So they backed USB. And pretty soon USB was ubiquitous and FW a niche product. Remember we are talking a global market here which is what put USB over the top. I suspect there are a 1,000 USB machines for every FW machine and that might be conservative.
Later USB 1.1 begat 2.0 and soon there will be a 3.0. There are also five iterations of FW by now.
As long as we are using RedBook and 24/96; speed is not an issue - the audio files are very small, while cache, RAM and busses are very fast. To be sure an old PC which is asked to do some other processor intensive tasks at the same time or whose HD is an overloaded nasty mess may have some trouble keeping up. Same for a 386 PC that is being asked to upsample. This is one of those fascinating things that the bit biters like to bring up over and over but one never finds a concrete example of... YMMV
FWIW the general consensus seems to be that while we can agree that FW is a much better format then USB for some things, the war is long over and FW is and will remain a niche product.
Consider that many of the newer Apple Notebooks like the MacBook, the MacBook Air and the Mac Mini don't come with FW. No argument that its a way to control costs - but it reflects the fact that no one uses it.
There is a reason that Steve, Gordon and most everyone else designs for USB - it's what people use. Which is why that is most likely where the innovations will occur. And is most certainly the choices are.