There is no need for any of Mr. Craven's security encryption schemes disguised as sonic improvements.I agree (if it would be the only aim of the idea).
Play the ball - not the man.... and try not to kick balls in a glass house.
Actually I made several technical comments:
Of which my main point: I wonder why no real, total AD/DA loop measurements are shown anywhere.
The other being the measurement with "correct impulse responses", ie. measuring a DAC not only a not existing, abstract sequence of (one) sample.
Regarding your technical arguments elsewhere:Since when is latency a distortion...?It may be a limiting factor for practibility reasons, or a simple inconvenience. But in replay audio it is (AFAIK) of no concern at all.
(It is of concern in live electronics, PAs and filtering.)
I can understand that eg. a mastering engineer isn't too enthusiastic about an additional treatment of his files for (at the moment) dubious advantages or dubious advantages in the market place.
I asked MQA for MQA treatment of my recordings and got no answer. :-)
My main doubts when SACD and DVD-A came out, was that
a) the differences between DACs were IME considerably more audible than the difference between the SACD and CD layer on a good quality Sony player. (And I didn't prefer SACD on every aspect).
b) the user interface of DVD-A was f* up from the beginning.: A sad tale.
The copy right protection of DVD-A was also of Bob Stuart origin...
c) there were some simply amazing PCM recordings on DAD (Classic Recordings), ie. a non copy protected standard format. These sounded better (for me) than any DVD-A (or SACD) I have.
And - funny! - they were transferred from analog tapes.
I feel (...) that the stereo vs. multichannel, and SACD vs. DVD-A format insecurities helped to move audiophile audio into the back yard of consumer electronics interest.
MQA most probably wan't help either. I'm sorry about that.
And I agree that sonically optimizing CD-replay is much more relevant to 99.9% of the potential public and 99.9% of the recordings, ie. for the music.
And I agree that there are some mind-boggling high quality recordings in the CD-format. So it's the quality of the recording itself that matters most, ie. the microphones, electronics, rooms, setup and mastering.