As a former industry expert on jitter in high-speed digital telecommunication systems, I always get sucked into these type of questions.... ;-)
It's key to understand that jitter on the 1/0 signal from the transport does not end when it hits the DAC, despite buffering. The clock that times the bits OUT from the DAC is derived from the input clock. The DAC represents a filter. Filtering jitter is not easy and it is never perfect. Jitter = distortion on the analog signal (discernable or not).
It's key to understand that jitter on the 1/0 signal from the transport does not end when it hits the DAC, despite buffering. The clock that times the bits OUT from the DAC is derived from the input clock. The DAC represents a filter. Filtering jitter is not easy and it is never perfect. Jitter = distortion on the analog signal (discernable or not).