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In article ,
Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |
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