Huh? I'd guestimate 99.9% of subscribers can play it just fine.This is the major problem with Amazon HD, hardly anyone can play it directly from their device
You've misinterpreted what I meant, of course people can play it but where are the dedicated devices to play it in full resolution and able to control it on their HiFi system? Such as we can with Tidal, Spotify, Qobuz etc.Huh? I'd guestimate 99.9% of subscribers can play it just fine.
I'm sure the boutique/3rd party market will adopt eventually.
Most folks own computers. With usb ports. Whether those are "dedicated" is irrelevant. With an internet connection, they will stream any of the services, including Amazon, just fine. No Denon, Pioneer or Yamaha required. Maybe an HP or Dell. They're seen at audio shows all the time, often laptops. Use an external usb DAC capable up whatever sample rate one imagines is required for "full resolution" above human 16/44.where are the dedicated devices to play it in full resolution and able to control it on their HiFi system? Such as we can with Tidal, Spotify, Qobuz etc.
very few devices will play it to my hifi system directly ie: not Airplay
Most folks own computers. With usb ports. Whether those are "dedicated" is irrelevant. With an internet connection, they will stream any of the services, including Amazon, just fine. No Denon, Pioneer or Yamaha required. Maybe an HP or Dell. They're seen at audio shows all the time, often laptops. Use an external usb DAC capable up whatever sample rate one imagines is required for "full resolution" above human 16/44.
Or wait for Lumin, etc. to adopt, hopefully eventually.
Yes, agree fashion is the number 1 audiophile priority.Dangling a laptop via USB off a two channel set-up is akin to hanging fuzzy dice from the mirror of a Porsche or Ferrari.
I agree. Any streaming that uses a generic computer is no better than using it to play ripped files. Basically, it is at the bottom of the audiophile pile.
All of the Lumins, Aurenders, Nucleus's, SGC's, Antipodes, Esoterics, they are all fairly heavyweight computers tied to your DAC
Half of the mentioned products are full blown x86 computers, but not Lumin - Lumin is comparatively lightweight.