Learsfool, I'm pleased I did get the first bit right, that is, I was correct in understanding what you were saying.
But, as to "how you can conclude that a recording must have worked right without playing it back", I'm very sorry, another "thought" experiment, and bear with me please ...
Recording a signal digitally and playing it back, for BOTH monitoring AND home playback purposes, is in essence two key processes: A->D, a conversion from an (microphone) analogue waveform to a digital representation (which from then on can be captured with zero distortion), and D->A, the digital representation converted back to an audio signal driving, say, headphones. Let's say, for argument, there was 10% distortion, loss of information, change of sound or whatever you want to call it in this overall process. Where was this 10% lost? Was it:
1) 10% loss in the A->D and 0% in the D->A, OR
2) 0% loss in the A->D and 10% in the D->A, OR
3) 5% loss in the A->D and 5% in the D->A, say
Based on my experiences I would, as a very rough guess, say:
0.1% loss in the A->D and 9.9% in the D->A
and it appears to me that you think it's 1), that is
10% loss in the A->D and 0% in the D->A
That's where we differ, and that's why I believe digital CAN do the job ...
Frank
But, as to "how you can conclude that a recording must have worked right without playing it back", I'm very sorry, another "thought" experiment, and bear with me please ...
Recording a signal digitally and playing it back, for BOTH monitoring AND home playback purposes, is in essence two key processes: A->D, a conversion from an (microphone) analogue waveform to a digital representation (which from then on can be captured with zero distortion), and D->A, the digital representation converted back to an audio signal driving, say, headphones. Let's say, for argument, there was 10% distortion, loss of information, change of sound or whatever you want to call it in this overall process. Where was this 10% lost? Was it:
1) 10% loss in the A->D and 0% in the D->A, OR
2) 0% loss in the A->D and 10% in the D->A, OR
3) 5% loss in the A->D and 5% in the D->A, say
Based on my experiences I would, as a very rough guess, say:
0.1% loss in the A->D and 9.9% in the D->A
and it appears to me that you think it's 1), that is
10% loss in the A->D and 0% in the D->A
That's where we differ, and that's why I believe digital CAN do the job ...
Frank