We're still back to the issue that programming code and data are accurately delivered by CD binary code in CD players but if that code in the same format is delivering music, it becomes corrupted.
As for the Krell MD10, the thing has a clear plexiglass top! There is an old saying that the "poison is in the dose." That particular example strikes me as a victory of visual appearance over function. (And, BTW, halogen light power supplies are an excellent source of EMI/RFI.)
As for "ones/zeros are not digitally encoded, they are contained within an analog modulated carrier envelope..." I do not believe that is a technically correct description of the digital recording and storage process. Certainly there can be vast differences in the quality of AD and DA conversion (and subsequent preamplification for analog output) but that is a separate issue from whether the binary code is accurately extracted from a CD.
As for the Krell MD10, the thing has a clear plexiglass top! There is an old saying that the "poison is in the dose." That particular example strikes me as a victory of visual appearance over function. (And, BTW, halogen light power supplies are an excellent source of EMI/RFI.)
As for "ones/zeros are not digitally encoded, they are contained within an analog modulated carrier envelope..." I do not believe that is a technically correct description of the digital recording and storage process. Certainly there can be vast differences in the quality of AD and DA conversion (and subsequent preamplification for analog output) but that is a separate issue from whether the binary code is accurately extracted from a CD.