babydoc
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- Aug 15, 2005
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To Serve or not to serve
Hi Bernard, As I am writing this, I am in the long process of cleaning my several thousand vinyl records on an Audio Desk System cleaner. So you can see where my heart really is. However, I also have about 5000 CDs which only duplicate about 1/3 of my LP collection. I was a server hold-out until about 4 years ago when I got my first Squeezebox. It escalated from there and now I have a Squeezebox Touch, Meridian Sooloos, and most recently a Bryston BDP-1 digital player. What I discovered was that when I had gotten all of my CDs downloaded to a server, I was actually listening to music that I would have never gotten around to hearing with the usual hunt and peck search of my shelves, even though everything was arranged alphabetically. The other consideration was getting access to much higher resolution music files through downloads. These are game changers and blow away standard CDs for the most part. Fortunately you can get into the server game relatively inexpensively. To my ear, there are no sonic shortcomings of FLAC stored files and you can construct playlists ad infinitum. Just a thought
Lawrence
I am almost embarrassed to say that I do not own a music server of any kind. All of my music listening is done via vinyl or CD's. I do, however, have one song on my iPhone that I downloaded. Does that count ?
I find that I no longer sit and listen critically to music; I'm more into just enjoying the music. My perspective on life has changed after doing battle with a recent serious illness.
Hi Bernard, As I am writing this, I am in the long process of cleaning my several thousand vinyl records on an Audio Desk System cleaner. So you can see where my heart really is. However, I also have about 5000 CDs which only duplicate about 1/3 of my LP collection. I was a server hold-out until about 4 years ago when I got my first Squeezebox. It escalated from there and now I have a Squeezebox Touch, Meridian Sooloos, and most recently a Bryston BDP-1 digital player. What I discovered was that when I had gotten all of my CDs downloaded to a server, I was actually listening to music that I would have never gotten around to hearing with the usual hunt and peck search of my shelves, even though everything was arranged alphabetically. The other consideration was getting access to much higher resolution music files through downloads. These are game changers and blow away standard CDs for the most part. Fortunately you can get into the server game relatively inexpensively. To my ear, there are no sonic shortcomings of FLAC stored files and you can construct playlists ad infinitum. Just a thought
Lawrence