And to all vinylistas, who highlight the "shortcomings" of sampling, do you think that the small groove of a record is large enough to be able to store all frequencies from 20 - 20 khz, not to mention the relative intensities, ie the dynamic range. You think all that information is FAITHFULLY written into 20 - 25 micro meters (typical width of a groove for 33rpm vinyl). No way, since it is limited by PHYSICAL SPACE.
With digital, there is no limit, all you need is a bigger disk. One can sample at higher frequencies as well as amplitudes. The typical 16 bit deep CD can store 65k different ranges. Increase that to 32 bits, and it will be 4 billion.
As I said before, I also DO like listening (I should say looking at) to vinyl but not because it sounds better but because it LOOKS better :-)
With digital, there is no limit, all you need is a bigger disk. One can sample at higher frequencies as well as amplitudes. The typical 16 bit deep CD can store 65k different ranges. Increase that to 32 bits, and it will be 4 billion.
As I said before, I also DO like listening (I should say looking at) to vinyl but not because it sounds better but because it LOOKS better :-)