Digital Audio for Dummies


As I have stated before, I'm a bit of an audio dinosaur.  I love simple.  I love reliable.  I love a high performance/price ratio.  So no surprise I'm still happily spinning discs.  Give me a nice CD player direct to an integrated and I'm good to go.

But it is 2018.  Reading on this forum about the demise of Oppo was a bit of a wake up call. Also the Lyngdorf 2170 has inspired me.  An elegant all in one box product that is ready to connect with many of the digital options now available.  So I'd like to get educated on what's out there and what you suggest.  Basically I would want to know about ripping all my CD's--exactly how that is done.  Dedicated audio computer?  How big of a hard drive/other considerations?  Wired vs. wireless.  And then what streaming services are out there?  Cost, quality, ease of use?

PLEASE keep things simple and don't assume the reader knows, for example, what Roon is.  I've seen it mentioned, but would want to know exactly what this does, how it functions, etc.

THANKS!
corelli
I agree with @rhljazz, @uberwaltz, and others on the Bluesound Vault 2. A very nice piece of audio gear that takes the computer out of the equation. Another note- One of the best things to know about Bluesound is the committment they have placed into customer service. Those guys had helped me alot. Not just once, many times with integration of my Node 2. But the Vault 2 does all the work once you place the CD into the device... even better.
Thanks for the further thoughts guys.  Gives me some direction on some avenues to explore.
So I have an Oppo 105d linked to my McIntosh MX120~ so I’ve been told I should get a DAC player to improve the sound of CDs and Superaudio CDs, can anyone comment on if this makes sense; and to which DAC I should look into? 
Steve, to answer your question about Chromecast, you can get an optical cable and go into a DAC that has an optical input, and use that DAC instead of the one in the Chromecast.  I use a Chord Mojo with mine, and it works well.
Steve, to answer your question about Chromecast, you can get an optical cable and go into a DAC that has an optical input, and use that DAC instead of the one in the Chromecast. I use a Chord Mojo with mine, and it works well.

I see.  This sounds like a prime candidate for jitter reduction using a Synchro-Mesh.  A lot like the Sonos, you are listening to the jitter of the clock inside the Chromecast:

http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=154310.0

The SM also gives you galvanic isolation and the output can be coax to the DAC rather than Toslink to the DAC, allowing even more jitter reduction. Toslink interfaces add jitter at both ends.

Steve N.

Empirical Audio