As I posted back in #6, I think the store is more important and has much greater potential for audiophiles. If the player increases appreciation and demand for hi-res digital audio, even better.
What other players, if the Pono player didn't exist, can use the Pono software?
Pardon my ignorance but you could play Neil's Pono software on an iPhone? That wouldn't eat up storage space?
As I posted back in #6, I think the store is more important and has much greater potential for audiophiles. If the player increases appreciation and demand for hi-res digital audio, even better.
Myles-Pono simply plays back PCM files from 16/44.1 up to 24/192. It is not an encode/decode device. The software available from the Pono site is the same as any other PCM download site except Pono "guarantees" their software to be exactly what they say it is and not simply RBCD that has been upsampled to make it appear as hi-rez.
honest question- how much demand for hi res audio really exists?
and have they fixed the redbook upsampled to "hirez" issue.
how many big labels are truly hi rez now?
As I posted back in #6, I think the store is more important and has much greater potential for audiophiles. If the player increases appreciation and demand for hi-res digital audio, even better.
honest question- how much demand for hi res audio really exists? and have they fixed the redbook upsampled to "hirez" issue.
i've really only focused on analog for the past two years.
Wow! Good for him.
His comments on MQA from Meridian are also fascinating. Now I'm really interested to hear it.
I was wondering if anyone was going to notice that. Let's see what someone whose ears we trust hears it in THEIR system, not a Meridian system! I have to say that I don't know anyone who owns Meridian electronics or speakers. And I've heard them.