I want digital audio


I love my hi-fi CD based systems, but I'm sure loving my iPod too! I can take 30-40 uncompressed CDs with me in the car in something the size of a deck of cards. I take all those CDs to the office, or travel anywhere, and pull up any song or CD or playlist and have some tunes. I can't wait for higher storage capacity and better audio capabilities. I can just imagine having my entire CD collection available at the press of a button. I'm sure the bleeding edge components will cost a lot (like the Linn system), but the iPod is setting the model for doing it pretty well for low cost (compared to many high-end systems). Some may turn their shoulder to it, but I think the iPod and the concept of digital audio are exciting and I'm looking forward to seeing where it leads over the next year. I hope someone comes up with a digital "transport" to connect to the DAC of my choice. Perhaps CES 2004 will have surprises for us in this new arena.
budrew
Budrew, get a G5 PowerMac. It comes with a built in Toslink digital ouput and iTunes software. You can order it with 500Gb of internal storage and more can be easily added via external Firewire drives. It will serve as an excellent quality hard drive transport. It willl allow you to organize your CD collection into easily accessible playlist and it will provide total integration with your iPod. A G5 cost <$2,000.
The G5 is a good deal. I Googled for "digital music servers"
and came up with a Marantz unit that had 80 GB storage that retailed for
around $2800 (it outputs analog only). With the G5 you get a computer
too! I just wish it had a different type of digital out other than toslink
(none of my DACs accept toslink). FWIW, I've been a long time Mac user
and glad to see Apple paying attention to this capability. I'm curious
what some of the audio manufacturers are thinking along these lines,
whether of not they want to play.
I have over 1,000 CD's burned to an external hard drive, which
I run with an apple i-book and i-tunes. I plug that into my processor and I have access to the entire catalogue. I don't use
this for critical listening, but it is great for parties. You can let your
guests scroll through the CD's and add to the play-list for the evening, lots of fun. Now that they are making these huge hard drives, you don't have to compress the music, you can rip your whole colection straight to the hard drive uncompressed.
If the Toslink optical output is a problem, you should get a Monarchy DIP. It will convert the Toslink to either an AES/EBU or S/PID coax signal. It also functions as a jitter reduction device. I believe they cost $200.
Rsbeck, I just did exactly what you have set up, but it's not working as I intended. The iBook I'm using is one I had laying around and the hard drive is only 20 GB total. I purchased a large external hard drive to store the music files (around 40 GBs so far). But whenever I try to create a playlist from the external hard drive or at least just play a song from it, iTunes copies the files onto the iBook's hard drive, which defeats my whole purpose of having hundreds of CDs available instantly. What's the solution here? I tried to Consolidate the Libraries, but that didn't do anything. Thanks.