New blog post on the world of portable hi res audio


Hi, Friends,
Happy to report that my blog, Steve's Audio Blog, has the beginning of a new series on the exploding world of portable, hi-res audio and headphones. The post is right here.
Have fun and feel free to comment!
rebbi
Rebbi  take a look at the Audioengine B1 Bluetooth receiver for an easy way to stream audio to your system from any Bluetooth enabled device.   

I use plex.  You can build a lossless flac music library and stream it from a web browser for free.  From anywhere with an Internet connection.    Plex app for mobile devices is $5.    Works great.   Premium plex subscription recognizes your music files (think Shazam) and tags them automatically. 
I bought an Audioengine Bluetooth receiver and when I could get it to connect it sounded good in a nice size but the Bluetooth connection was problematic. I tried it with multiple devices but it just didn't work at all well. It must have been a defective Bluetooth receiver.

I returned it and decided to try the Peachtree Audio deepblue2. The Bluetooth works perfectly and the sound is much better than the Audioengine, admittedly in a larger device and costing $100 more.
rebbi,
Very timely thread.

I've been reading threads over on Head-Fi. It seems the sound quality of portable systems has gotten very good.

 

I'd be very interested in your comparison between a high end main system vs a high quality portable system. Most of the discussions on Head-fi are comparisons among head phone systems only.


My main system is all digital -- expensive and extensive. I'm fussy about SQ but if a portable system could approach the SQ of my main, the compactness and convenience might make me rethink the whole concept of a main system.


Getting good sound out of a computer system is expensive and frustrating.


Balanced Power Technologies BP1 Conditioner
Toshiba Lap top running Jriver
Crossover ethernet cable to Sonore Rendu
Warpspeed Optical Attenuator
Wired4Sound DAC 2
First Watt J1
Decapo 3A MM Speakers