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Originally posted by Tyler Durden
The argument about digital being 1 and 0's is soooo old hat now and I have supplied vast amounts of reasearch previously to back up why.
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Where? I'd like to see it. Really.
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So my question is this - are you honestly saying that a $75 cd player will sound exactly the same as a $4000 cd player and are we all being conned? And will a $125 DVD player gives as good a performance - aurally - as a $4000 player? Surely if digital data is digital data (as you say) then they must!
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If you're using a digital connection, and they both have the same bit bandwidth, then yes. Why not? Why use digital in the first place if it's no better than analog?
Are we all being conned?!?!?!
So are you saying that a $25 CD-ROM drive will do a worse job of copying game files over to my computer than a $250 DVD-ROM/CD-R drive? Will I not have the game copied correctly?
I'd like somebody to explain to me just how these digital signals come out sounding different. Technical details with no limits. I can't honestly see how they could unless both Dolby
and DTS have designed some of the worst digital compression schemes known to man. The fact that I either do or don't get my satelite signal from miles up in space to my house (with a working capability at about 60% correct bits) demonstrates the capability of digital encoding.