The Bodiezaffa
New member
In that case Tidal would not need MQA files at all. Another nail in the coffin.
Does anyone know what % MQA membership represent
In that case Tidal would not need MQA files at all. Another nail in the coffin.
My post was referring to Bodizaffa’s (Mark) post.
If MQA has a sonic advantage over a lossless format, its my opinion it is not due to their compression algorithm. Those and the need for them have pretty much faded away unless you are at the edge of the universe and have CenturyLink ADSL.![]()
A few years ago I was in that boat and supported MQA. Now I have fiber internet.
In my view any sonic improvement is due to their use of specific apodizing encoding filters designed to mitigate the damage done by the low pass filters used in mastering A/D converters, especially early ones. This is potentially a big deal and gets overlooked. Maybe someone will step up and buy this piece of the puzzle.
Apart from this, any value their compression algorithms have would be to reduce steaming costs for service providers. So far Tidal is the only test case. We’ll see what happens and if thy pony up some cash to keep their streaming costs lower.
Lots of ways this could play out.
This technology may have value and we’ll see what happens
Reddit - Dive into anything
In short, Tidal is going lossless FLAC.
Bye MQA.
Jesse Dorogusker on the relationship of Tidal and MQA:
“Hi-res FLAC will come soon. TIDAL added MQA when others were streaming low bitrate AAC (and some still do). It was a balance of quality and bandwidth. Cell networks are better now. Hi-res FLAC files will be big, but we think the infra is ready, even on mobile.”
Member asked:
“Any chance Tidal might acquire MQA?”
Jesse Dorogusker:
“No, not acquiring MQA.”
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
Can anyone with a non-MQA DAC play 96k or 192k from Tidal now?
If you can then I don't understand why add FLAC hi res, unless it's so those with MQA can receive hi res and bypass that software. If not, then seems there's a section of customers being left out and adding FLAC would increase potential customers.
I'm not sure what you are asking, but I suspect it will be weeks or months before there is a large selection of hi-res FLACs on Tidal. The MQA offerings may well stay there also, depending on the arrangements between Tidal and the labels.
I don't know how to make it anymore simple, if your DAC is not MQA can you play hi res from Tidal? Meaning no MQA software anywhere in the digital chain.
I see that this has already been answered. I thought the answer was obvious before you asked the question, which is why I wasn’t sure what or why you were asking.I don't know how to make it anymore simple, if your DAC is not MQA can you play hi res from Tidal? Meaning no MQA software anywhere in the digital chain.
Cool, as I wasn’t switching to qobuz with its crappy app and limited catalog.
As answered in post #109, before Tidal starts giving you non-MQA Hi-Res FLAC, you only get up to CD-quality or MQA coded music. You get degraded SQ from MQA music without MQA decoder in place. In this case, you will not see anything beyond 44.1kHz or 48kHz displayed on non-MQA DAC.
If you care about it this much you should subscribe to Qobuz, so you can enjoy Hi-Res music now, instead of waiting.
I see that this has already been answered. I thought the answer was obvious before you asked the question, which is why I wasn’t sure what or why you were asking.
I see that this has already been answered. I thought the answer was obvious before you asked the question, which is why I wasn’t sure what or why you were asking.