- Thread Author
- #61
I'm personally holding out for MQA Reel to Reel, for the ultimate expression of 19th century stereo.
LOL
I'm personally holding out for MQA Reel to Reel, for the ultimate expression of 19th century stereo.
It came from reading the article Stenho posted.
no surprise - every audio format Bob Stuart has gone belly up. remember dvd audio.
I wonder what will happen to Tidal now?
The list of failed audio formats keeps growing. We can now add MQA to the list.
The Biggest Failures in Consumer Audio/Video Electronics History | Audioholics
I anticipate that the demand for new MQA-capable DACs will vanish and that used MQA-capable equipment will soon be flooding the market (at much lower prices of course).
Too early to call it a failure. What if they find a buyer? Could be a return for investors.
:roflmao:Too early to call it a failure. What if they find a buyer? Could be a return for investors.
This is a silly article on a silly website. Most of us have little respect for audioholics.com and this is a good illustration for why. It mixes some technologically sound developments (Betamax, DAT, SACD, DVD-A) which failed for marketing reasons with some items most of us have probably never heard of (H-PAS?) and a variety of ill-conceived from the start products (DCC, Elcaset, DIVX, HD DVD). MQA probably belongs in that last category, with the striking difference that it has enjoyed an unwarranted degree of support from the (supposedly) unbiased non-trade periodicals and webzines.
nicoff;35894 I anticipate that the demand for new MQA-capable DACs will vanish and that used MQA-capable equipment will soon be flooding the market (at much lower prices of course).[/QUOTE said:That would be foolish to sell a DAC just because MQA goes away, the DAC still works, MQA is just a feature no longer used. That would be like selling your home theater if DTS went out of business, why, you still have Dolby and the receiver still works. Of course, if MQA ceased new DAC's would no longer offer MQA, who sells gear with defunct features?
Too early to call it a failure. What if they find a buyer? Could be a return for investors.
That would be foolish to sell a DAC just because MQA goes away, the DAC still works, MQA is just a feature no longer used. That would be like selling your home theater if DTS went out of business, why, you still have Dolby and the receiver still works. Of course, if MQA ceased new DAC's would no longer offer MQA, who sells gear with defunct features?