In my system Quobuz is at the very least equal to my library stored on a Synology NAS (sometimes even better).
Oz
Oz
Bits Are Bits, Right?
Not sure what you guys are streaming or using but not my experience at all! Qobuz hires at 24/192 played back through my MHDT Orchid into BAT vk300se sounds spectacular. Anyone who just disses streaming for the sake of it without actually trying a decent setup is not being fair to the media one little bit. |
Glad you are liking the Orchid uber. I have mine in my computer system. It sounds better than my turntable in that system by a considerable margin and the turntable, cartridge and phono stage cost close to three times as much as the Orchid. In my main system, I'd say digital vs. analog is a toss up, with each doing some things better than the other. Again, much bigger investment in the vinyl rig. |
mkgus OP Yes, digital only exists as a mathematical concept. All of reality is analog (at least the reality we deal with - at the scale of Planck time and Planck lengths things may be different). A stream of “digital” data is an analog signal that a computer has to interpret as a 1 or a 0 by deciding when the value has changed enough and at what time to be interpreted as a different bit. >>>>No, actually reality is more like digital. At the quantum level, which is really where the rubber meets the road let me remind you, gentle readers, that everything can be described by its quantum state; electrons have certain quantum states and require a certain amount of energy to get to the next level/orbit. That is more like Digital than Analog, I.e., having non-continuous states. In an analog world the electrons would not have non-continuous orbits. Light also is described by quantum states. To whit, “The photon model accounts for anomalous observations, including the properties of black-body radiation, that others (notably Max Planck) had tried to explain using semiclassical models. In that model, light is described by Maxwell’s equations, but material objects emit and absorb light in quantized amounts (i.e., they change energy only by certain particular discrete amounts). Although these semiclassical models contributed to the development of quantum mechanics, many further experiments[3][4] beginning with the phenomenon of Compton scattering of single photons by electrons, validated Einstein’s hypothesis that light itself is quantized.[5]” |