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In Reply to: RE: Mr. Darko may be missing a few facts... posted by Ivan303 on January 12, 2017 at 07:58:05
" I seem to recall Mr. Stuart saying he didn't think we really needed all 24 bits (below the noise floor) so he used them do encode the extra samples between 48KHz and 96KHz and that why some still call it a 'lossey' codec.
But I could be wrong."
I get the impression from a couple of the reader comments posted on Mr. Darko's page that "lossy" is immediately thought of by some folk as being synonymous with "frequency loss". As has been the history of MQA to date, prejudice coupled with little desire to find out the facts.
Follow Ups:
There still appears to be a lot of speculation and confusion surrounding MQA.Right now MQA seems like unnecessary smoke and mirrors with lots of complexity wrapped up in great marketing spin. The next new thing for audiophiles to play with and the founders to profit from. Next.
Even if MQA offers outstanding results, I'm not sure how it will benefit ME. I have thousands of music files already ripped or downloaded that sound outstanding on my present equipment. I'm not likely to repurchase my music in MQA.
I suppose if I were to subscribe to Tidal it may be beneficial for streaming.
Until MQA goes more main stream, I'll sit on the sidelines as I often do as I am not an early adopter. But I'll probably give it a try someday unless it dies on the vine.
What ever happened to Pono? Still under construction? ;-)
Edits: 01/12/17
the available content approaches 0.5%.
I'll be retired by then. :)
I've been meaning to post an update on Pono. Tonight I will start a thread on hi res. I received an email from them, and I want to reread it before I post.
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Big speakers and little amps blew my mind!
Interesting. When the Pono service went down they were talking about rebuilding it but that was quite a while ago. Please update us when you have a chance.
Who knows?
But if you start with 24/96 music and end up with 24/96 where the last four bits are 'zero' because you used those four bits to carry information between 48Khz and 96KHz, one COULD safely call such a codec 'Lossy', 'Lossey', or even 'Lossie'. ;-)
Woof, woof!!!
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