USB 1.1 was indeed pretty useless for audio applications. However, that was a long time ago in IT development terms. USB 3.0 and 3.1 are miles better and do a far better job, feeding a decent external DAC, than the internal audio circuitry of all but the most sophisticated/expensive dedicated audio computers. Also, an external USB connected audio processor can be easily used with more than one computer. I started recording using a computer back in the days of W98. Not via USB, of course, but Terratec EWS88MT. These days I prefer to use dedicated recording devices, then transfer to a computer for editing.
Re. the BBC's 320kbps VBR,48k sample rate AAC-LC, when I capture it and load it into Sound Forge Pro 13, it generates a 32-bit floating point quantization LPCM file. VLC Player also identifies it as a 32-bit floating point. Now, why would that be? Surely the Beeb only uses 16-bit quatization for its AAC-LC processing?
Re. the BBC's 320kbps VBR,48k sample rate AAC-LC, when I capture it and load it into Sound Forge Pro 13, it generates a 32-bit floating point quantization LPCM file. VLC Player also identifies it as a 32-bit floating point. Now, why would that be? Surely the Beeb only uses 16-bit quatization for its AAC-LC processing?
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