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In Reply to: getting started in computer-based audio posted by Abbey Road on April 12, 2007 at 12:49:55:
About 2 months ago I was where you are.I went with a Mac Mini, a 320 gig Firewire external HD, using iTunes to rip to Apple Lossless files on the external. Then I use Squeezebox to send the music via wireless networking to my Musical Fidelity X-Dac v3 and to my stereo system.
Total cost for ALL pieces was $1,600.
I'm a PC guy and this is my first Mac, but I work at home and use my PC for work and the Mac for music only.
This works great and sounds great too. Plus it was very easy. I probably don't need the Squeezebox as it's only 3 feet away from the Mac Mini, I could use the digital out of Mac right into the Dac and the Mini comes with a remote control that works the iTunes. But I like the display on the Squeezebox and it's full featured remote too. I can scan my ENTIRE music collection with the remote.
I have the Mac sitting on top of the Dell desktop tower that's sitting at my side while I'm working. I use a Keyboard/Video/Mouse switch to use my Dell Keboard, monitor and mouse with the Mac. I just push a button on the desk to switch between PC and Mac.
I only have to switch to the Mac ocassionally to check on my iTunes music list and CD artwork etc. The rest of the time I just use the Squeezebox remote to pick music that I want to hear.
I've been ripping CDs for 2-weeks now and I'm in the middle of the "O" CDs now. I rip while I work and I rip about 30 CDs a day. I've ripped two while typing this. I just insert them into the Mac and it does everything automaticly while I'm working on the PC and the Mac spits the CD out when it's done.
Simple, easy to set up, good sound, and not very expensive either. I say it's the way to go. Others here will tell you that you must use a PC, rip to FLAC with Exact Audio Copy and play your files with Foobar2000 and an ASIO driver out to a USB DAC. However, I don't think that is the "only" way to go. Consider the Mac Mini. You'll be happy with that choice.
Follow Ups:
You may not have tried this, but here goes. I listen to internet radio via itunes on my PC. I had a squeezebox, but gave it up in favor of my Burwen Bobcat USB dac. I miss the SB display, but can live without it. What drives me crazy when surfing internet radio by remote using itunes is that when a station is slow or off the air, itunes gets "stuck" and I have to get up, walk over to the PC, "stop" the dialog box it brings up while "connecting", then start another station and trod back to my listening chair. This generally happens in pitch blackness whilst I listen between midnight and 1:00am - VERY frustrating.The SB would never get stuck - you could always switch it to the next station, that's the one thing I really miss! Is there anything in the itunes remote that might solve this? I highly doubt it, but if there was I'd go buy a mac mini just to fix that, happily.
Hopefully someone will make an external display unit for itunes one day - I really love it for internet radio. If the SB had a USB out I'd try it with my Bobcat - or if there were any such thing as an optical to USB converter I'd even try that (there is USB to optical, but I've never seen the reverse).
You can always use the bluetooth mouse/keyboard options.
My Mini has a remote, but:
1. I don't listen to Internet Radio
2. I'm using the SB3 and haven't tried the Mini's remote.
3. I haven't tried listening to the Mini without the SB3. I plan to, but haven't as of yet.
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