Building a music server - newbie


OK - there are probably posts already. Old guy wants to build a music server. From what I understand I just need a computer, sound card and some software. Waiting for Window 7 to come out & will get a PC.

Sound card. Looks like the Lynx is highly rated but it's $700.00. Any comments on the ASUS card for $175.00.

Software. Looks like a lot out there. Seems like J River or Monkey Media? comments.

I am just going to hook this up to my stereo preamp to run it through my speakers.

Any suggestions welcome as I am trying to educate myself and am not overly technical.

Thanks
dmgrant1
I use a 2.4 gig dual core with 8 gigs of ram....digital out to a monarchy M-24 Dac/preamp.

I use dbpoweramp software as my ripper (wav file, and it gets all the album covers for display in Media Center)....and I use Windows media center for playback.

And of course....I've been using Windows 7 for months....I love it, best operating system ever! (and I'm a linux guy)
Use one of the several USB DACs out there and avoid using the sound card altogether. This gets the critical circuitry out of the RF hell inside the computer case. I've thought about putting together a hybrid solution where the USB DAC sits on your equipment rack connected to the preamp. If your music is on a laptop, you just plug in the USB on the laptop when you want to listen to music. You have the laptop to use for normal computer tasks AND you have your music collection with you when you're away from your main system.

Dick
I'm with Dick, use a USB DAC, or one of those USB/Optical converters to a DAC, and then to your preamp. It's much simpler than going for a soundcard, and probably cheaper too. Studio soundcards have many features unnecessary for audio; matrixing your channels might be fun to do if you have multiple systems and switch speakers around often, but it's mainly for studio use in mixing.

Here's another tip. I recommend you go with a network attached storage, so you can move your hard drive -- the noisiest component -- away from your system. You should also consider a RAID backup, because it's only a matter of time before hard drives will fail.

As for software, use anythings; it's a graphical, and ergonomic preference thing. The only thing that matters is that the software allows for correct drivers, which is pretty much damn near all of them. Windows Vista and above the default drivers are perfect, so it's not a complicated process at all. I recommend foobar2000 for it's customizable interface -- and it's free. Monkey Media costs money I think, and offers no real advantages over foobar2000. J Rivers is a bit on the simplistic side for me, it's nothing much to look at, and feels "clunky" to use.