Dave 2002 - the best way to ensure or check what your computer's doing is, on macs anyway, bring up the Audio Midi Settings where the bitrate/sampling rate is stated. (Applications>Utilities>Audio Midi Setup). Macs often need this adjusting manually to match the original rate of your chosen recording. Mahlerei is of course right, once the digital signal (USB or Optical) is fed out of the computer the DAC becomes the controller, so you just have to check those rates in Audio Midi. I keep it handy in the dock.
Dacs like the Cambridge or Arcam are excellent for computer sources but of course they may not improve on the DAC in a good CD player, especially a recent one. I once tried the Musical Fidelity TriVista Dac, it did little or nothing for an Arcam Alpha 9 CD or a Krell KAV-300, so - horses for courses.
Hi-res - vast subject, reflecting on the limitations of speakers as mentioned in that Computer Audiophile thread. I use the Townsend Supertweeters which might, just might, make those ethereal improvements more audible. What I tend to feel with 24-bit audio is a naturalness, a low-level clarity and presence, and a low-distortion, more open sound in large and fierce orchestral climaxes which is more generous and gratifying. If these improvements are down to the digital engineering being easier using 24-bit etc. in the mastering process, rather than increased information storage/retrieval (audible or not), I'm not too bothered if the results are as good as the recent BIS Dvorak 7th (Malaysian PO/Claus Peter Flor) 24/48 file!
Dacs like the Cambridge or Arcam are excellent for computer sources but of course they may not improve on the DAC in a good CD player, especially a recent one. I once tried the Musical Fidelity TriVista Dac, it did little or nothing for an Arcam Alpha 9 CD or a Krell KAV-300, so - horses for courses.
Hi-res - vast subject, reflecting on the limitations of speakers as mentioned in that Computer Audiophile thread. I use the Townsend Supertweeters which might, just might, make those ethereal improvements more audible. What I tend to feel with 24-bit audio is a naturalness, a low-level clarity and presence, and a low-distortion, more open sound in large and fierce orchestral climaxes which is more generous and gratifying. If these improvements are down to the digital engineering being easier using 24-bit etc. in the mastering process, rather than increased information storage/retrieval (audible or not), I'm not too bothered if the results are as good as the recent BIS Dvorak 7th (Malaysian PO/Claus Peter Flor) 24/48 file!
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