Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone have any experience with the Olive "Symphony" audio center
that is the subject of this New York Times article: http://tinyurl.com/ag9om (Registration is required.) [Moderator's note: The above link is to the NYTimes. The company's website is: www.olive.us. -- deb ] It's described on the company's Website as being especially designed for the classical music listener. I'm wondering whether it's really a great high-end audio invention. pgaron |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
pgaron wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with the Olive "Symphony" audio center that is the subject of this New York Times article: http://tinyurl.com/ag9om (Registration is required.) [Moderator's note: The above link is to the NYTimes. The company's website is: www.olive.us. -- deb ] It's described on the company's Website as being especially designed for the classical music listener. I'm wondering whether it's really a great high-end audio invention. None of its individual functions is revolutionary. It's the combination--playing, ripping and burning CDs, digitizing vinyl, networking with iPods and computers (via Ethernet or WiFi). Plus an interface of iPod-like elegance. That David Pogue's review was the hottest download at nytimes.com on Fitzmas Eve is testament to its potentially broad appeal. I'm not sure why they've keyed their marketing to classical listeners, except that the accompanying playlist software (Mac-only) apparently is friendlier to classical than the standard artist/song/album arrangement of iTunes. A few weaknesses: It can play but not rip to AAC, and it can't play iTunes Music Store downloads. The latter is odd, given its Mac-ish nature. Presumably you'd want to make the Olive one of your accepted computers. Even so, it's going on my Christmas list. And I'll bet Atkinon's already got one for review. bob |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|