A hardware device like a streamer eliminates your having to run software from your PC. You would only use your PC to share a folder (your music library) to a network that the streamer can access.What would be the point of that?
A can buy a streamer for less than $150. You can even build one for less than $100. Hardly rich folk territory.I'm not sure if I have the money and space for all that extra stuff. I should give JRiver a try before anything else. It sounds like some folks are rich here.
I wish they had a standalone audio file player device. Instead of a cassette deck, you simply play MP3's. An integrated graphic equalizer with memory presets would even be sweeter. Imagine custom equalizer settings for each and every music track! Or adaptive learning equalizer that optimizes settings automatically based on your listening habits.A can buy a streamer for less than $150. You can even build one for less than $100. Hardly rich folk territory.
I think there is such a thing already. It is called Spotify.I wish they had a standalone audio file player device. Instead of a cassette deck, you simply play MP3's. An integrated graphic equalizer with memory presets would even be sweeter. Imagine custom equalizer settings for each and every music track! Or adaptive learning equalizer that optimizes settings automatically based on your listening habits.
First you buy a streamer (physical hardware like the Wiim streamer) that comes with Spotify-Connect.Spotify is a web-based service, not a physical piece of electronic equipment.
Why do I need a streamer to play audio files I already own at home anyway? What can a streamer do that a PC can't? What can a streamer do that a phone can't?First you buy a streamer (physical hardware like the Wiim streamer) that comes with Spotify-Connect.
Then you use Spotify. It is very simple to use and no need for PC or Jplay. It will do everything on your list.
Very well, I will sleep on the possibility of a future streamer for now. I will have to try to figure out where to put the damn thing on my entertainment rack.
I did a little research on YouTube, "Do I need a streamer?"
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DAC stands for digital-to-analog converter. Doesn't the Windows motherboard do that already with the line-out jack?
The same is true with physical computers vs virtual machines. Virtual machines are no substitute for the real deal, hardware, that which can see with your own eyes, touch with your own hands and smell the soldering flux with your own nose. People and companies install virtual machines to cheap out. Hardware costs both money and physical space. Hardware takes more muscle, sweat, busted knuckles and brains to install and maintain. Hardware consumes electricity. Hardware might even look clunky to the human eye and not fit in with home décor well.You don’t make it with different software. Qobuz = Qobuz and Tidal = Tidal, no matter what software you use to build a skin around it. It can upsample a bit, but that impact is small.
It is the hardware that makes the big differences in sound quality.