To Stream or Not to Stream


Need advice Audiogoners... I'm considering jumping into the streaming "waters". The features of the Aurender ACS 10 are most appealing to me, specifically the CD ripper feature (have a collection in excess 7k CD's). Would coupling the Aurender with the Schitt YGGDRASIL be a good pairing? Recommendations and suggestions would be greatly appreciated... Thanks
audi-owe
streaming only gives you all the recorded music in the world at your fingertips... no big deal really 🤔
Many thanks for all of your responses imparting insightful advice and recommendations... 

Cheers,
Lou
Streaming is for background music only. In no way shape or form is it ready for serious listening. Even streaming off your own system is problematic. Playing Hi Res files directly is fine. Just subject to the same variability all recorded music is. To be an audiophile one has to be a collector of music. The two are inseparable. 
IMHO streaming is for people who like music just not enough to collect it, who are not serious about their systems or know what they are missing.  
Streaming is just one more arrow in the quiver.  It doesn't disqualify you from being an "audiophile".

Yes, the sound quality of my turntable is noticeably better than streaming.  Yes, when I want to listen intently, the majority of that listening is done with vinyl.  

On the other hand, the cost/performance and selection that streaming delivers is hard to beat.  The music I discover streaming, often leads to vinyl purchases.  And contrary to the beliefs of some, it can sound really good.  There are a lot of variables, the quality of the recording, mastering, etc., file quality, how that file gets to your streamer/dac, and the DAC itself.

Streaming leads to vinyl purchase that are sometimes disappointing because they were made from the digital copy and poorly pressed onto the vinyl which is warped and has a lot of ticks and pops and takes up a lot more space in my house than the digital version.  A lot of new vinyl is crap, and a lot of good old vinyl is hard to find and expensive.

For me, it's not an either/or proposition and both formats have their pluses and minuses.

I also have a lot of CD's and have ripped a good many of them.  You don't need a fancy box to do that, your computer should be able to do that and using your computer makes it easy to make a backup copy.  I rip my CD's to an external hard drive using foobar2000 and backup that drive to another external drive and also to the cloud.  Just share the hard drive on your network and you can access it with a number of apps.  I use both the Lumin app and BubbleUPnP.
unless you have a well into five digits $ analog front end, anyone who says streaming doesn’t sound excellent (by an experienced hifi enthusiast standard) and fully comparable to analog just hasn’t done it right

statements to this effect speaks more of the person saying it... stuck in their ways, closed mind, too lazy to try and experience what the new stuff has to offer, clinging onto wishful, out of date beliefs

eos