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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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One might ask why high rez matters beyond a marketing plan. This when cd
blue book is not demonstrated to be distinguishable from it. Sony has a new line of digital hardware that stores and plays most high rez formats. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13645_3-57...news&tag=title |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
Audio_Empire writes: In article , wrote: One might ask why high rez matters beyond a marketing plan. This when cd blue book is not demonstrated to be distinguishable from it. Sony has a new line of digital hardware that stores and plays most high rez formats. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13645_3-57...about-high-res olution-audio-again/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=title One thing that they don't say is whether these new Sony "High-Resolution" Players will handle the DSD format or not. These look like "me too" products to me. According to the Sony press release link in the article: "The flagship model, part of Sony?s ES (Elevated Standard) line, HAP-Z1ES Hi-Res HDD Music Player features a one-terabyte hard disc drive and DSD Re-mastering engine to convert and enhance virtually any music files to DSD (5.6M) quality. As with all of Sony's ES products, build-quality and sound performance technics have been instituted including, Analog FIR filter, low-phase noise liquid crystal oscillator, large capacity twin transformers and many more." It goes on to say all the other new models can play DSD too. http://blog.sony.com/press/sony-intr...e-and-quality/ -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Some have wondered about sony including some recordings on their new
products. This week's stereophile in their bit about the products says that 20 recordings will be included. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
wrote: Some have wondered about sony including some recordings on their new products. This week's stereophile in their bit about the products says that 20 recordings will be included. Does it say what music is included, or can the customer choose from their catalogue? --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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wrote:
One might ask why high rez matters beyond a marketing plan. This when cd blue book is not demonstrated to be distinguishable from it. Sony has a new line of digital hardware that stores and plays most high rez formats. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13645_3-57...news&tag=title It's a Sony. I suspect it's so crippled by Digital Restrictions Management as to be unusable. Andrew. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
Andrew Haley wrote: wrote: One might ask why high rez matters beyond a marketing plan. This when cd blue book is not demonstrated to be distinguishable from it. Sony has a new line of digital hardware that stores and plays most high rez formats. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13645_3-57...s-about-high-r esolution-audio-again/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=title It's a Sony. I suspect it's so crippled by Digital Restrictions Management as to be unusable. Andrew. I wouldn't doubt that. Sony has great ideas, but they always manage to screw the pooch somehow. They either don't follow through with marketing the ideas (SACD) or they stubbornly refuse to fit the product to the real marketing demands (BetaMax). --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Audio_Empire wrote:
Sony has great ideas, but they always manage to screw the pooch somehow. They either don't follow through with marketing the ideas (SACD) or they stubbornly refuse to fit the product to the real marketing demands (BetaMax). I don't think SACD was so much badly marketed as badly timed. It was introduced at the same time as MP3 players, and an important feature was that SACDs couldn't be ripped. It looked to me (and to many others) like that was the real purpose of SACD: an unrippable medium. High-res was just a teaser to get people to buy them. This belief was perhaps wrong, and the timing was just an unfortunate coincidence. But with people's listening moving onto the cloud and digital players, any format tied to a physical medium is a relic, no matter how good it can sound. If the new Sony players don't allow the user the freedom to listen to their music where and how they want those players will fail, and deservedly so. Andrew. |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
Andrew Haley wrote: Audio_Empire wrote: Sony has great ideas, but they always manage to screw the pooch somehow. They either don't follow through with marketing the ideas (SACD) or they stubbornly refuse to fit the product to the real marketing demands (BetaMax). I don't think SACD was so much badly marketed as badly timed. It was introduced at the same time as MP3 players, and an important feature was that SACDs couldn't be ripped. It looked to me (and to many others) like that was the real purpose of SACD: an unrippable medium. High-res was just a teaser to get people to buy them. This belief was perhaps wrong, and the timing was just an unfortunate coincidence. But with people's listening moving onto the cloud and digital players, any format tied to a physical medium is a relic, no matter how good it can sound. If the new Sony players don't allow the user the freedom to listen to their music where and how they want those players will fail, and deservedly so. Andrew. I don't think that being not "ripp-able" had anything to do with SACD's failure. People interested in SACD wouldn't be interested in MP3 at all. Besides, very soon after Sony introduced the format, other record companies were producing hybrid disks that would play as regular CDs when played on a standard CD player and would play as a SACD on an SACD player. When the CD layer was played, that could be ripped. The first generation of Sony SACDs were SACD ONLY, and that was Sony's marketing error, and was typical of Sony's arrogant marketing. They lost the Betamax Vs. the VHS "war" for exactly the same kind of arrogant marketing. Sony demonstrated Beta to RCA who wanted to license Beta as their home recording format. When RCA told Sony that they liked the format EXCEPT that they needed for Sony to modify Beta so that it could record 120 minutes (the original BetaMax format was 90 minutes of record time maximum). Sony responded by telling RCA that what they demonstrated was THE WAY BetaMax was and they had no intention of changing it. RCA then said thanks but no thanks and chose VHS over Beta because it could record 120 minutes. Eventually, Sony came out with Beta 2 which was half the speed and would give 180 minutes on a standard tape, but by then, it was too late. Likewise, Sony never made hybrid SACD/CD discs initially and by the time they decided to allow it, the audio world had decided SACD was too limiting. It''s the same arrogant marketing stance and it seems that they never learned that Sony NEEDS to follow the market, not try to force the market into following Sony. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Audio_Empire wrote:
In article , Andrew Haley wrote: Audio_Empire wrote: Sony has great ideas, but they always manage to screw the pooch somehow. They either don't follow through with marketing the ideas (SACD) or they stubbornly refuse to fit the product to the real marketing demands (BetaMax). I don't think SACD was so much badly marketed as badly timed. It was introduced at the same time as MP3 players, and an important feature was that SACDs couldn't be ripped. It looked to me (and to many others) like that was the real purpose of SACD: an unrippable medium. High-res was just a teaser to get people to buy them. This belief was perhaps wrong, and the timing was just an unfortunate coincidence. But with people's listening moving onto the cloud and digital players, any format tied to a physical medium is a relic, no matter how good it can sound. If the new Sony players don't allow the user the freedom to listen to their music where and how they want those players will fail, and deservedly so. I don't think that being not "ripp-able" had anything to do with SACD's failure. People interested in SACD wouldn't be interested in MP3 at all. I think you're denying my existence. Besides, very soon after Sony introduced the format, other record companies were producing hybrid disks that would play as regular CDs when played on a standard CD player and would play as a SACD on an SACD player. When the CD layer was played, that could be ripped. The first generation of Sony SACDs were SACD ONLY, and that was Sony's marketing error, and was typical of Sony's arrogant marketing. Indeed. Mind you, dual-layer hybrid SACDs weren't all that easy to make at the time, and it wasn't clear how well legacy CD players would cope with them. Producing SACD-only discs was the safest thing to do from an engineering point of view. And I still think a major motivation for the SACD was to be unrippable. If you look at the engineering effort that went into the copy-prevention features of SACD, there's a lot to support that view. Andrew. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Sunday, September 15, 2013 7:44:56 PM UTC-7, Audio_Empire wrote:
In article , Andrew Haley wrote: Audio_Empire wrote: Sony has great ideas, but they always manage to screw the pooch somehow. They either don't follow through with marketing the ideas (SACD) or they stubbornly refuse to fit the product to the real marketing demands (BetaMax). I don't think SACD was so much badly marketed as badly timed. It was introduced at the same time as MP3 players, and an important feature was that SACDs couldn't be ripped. It looked to me (and to many others) like that was the real purpose of SACD: an unrippable medium. High-res was just a teaser to get people to buy them. This belief was perhaps wrong, and the timing was just an unfortunate coincidence. But with people's listening moving onto the cloud and digital players, any format tied to a physical medium is a relic, no matter how good it can sound. If the new Sony players don't allow the user the freedom to listen to their music where and how they want those players will fail, and deservedly so. Andrew. I don't think that being not "ripp-able" had anything to do with SACD's failure. Failure? SACD is alive and well in the audiophile market. Lot's of new SACDs coming out each week and many of them are really well mastered. SACDs are about as dead as vinyl. IOW they are the rarest of beasts, physical media that is on the rise. |
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