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Resolution Revolution

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I have found that WD TV Live (at least the current version) truly supports 192/24 files. I ripped some of my DVD-Audio discs to hi-res WAV, and have confirmed that it outputs at that resolution to my Onkyo receiver. Of course, with WAV you need no transcoding. I had a Boxee (which claimed to support hi-res), but it never played back my hi-res files without down-ressing them; the highest sample rate I ever confirmed was 48 KHz. Bottom line, WD TV Live is an inexpensive way to get hi-res audio files to your A/V system and I would propose hooking a hard drive directly to it via USB. Obviously, WD TV Live does a lot of other things that are more prominently touted, so this ability to play hi-res files is icing on the cake. Much better than Boxee in my opinion.

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A few years ago, E. Brad Meyer and David R. Moran conducted a controlled listening comparison between "high-resolution" two-channel DVD-Audio or SACD music recordings and 44.1-kHz/16-bit versions of the same. They found that listeners could not tell the difference. (Members of the Audio Engineering Society can read a full report in Vol. 55, No.9, of the AES Journal, from 2007.) This correlates with my own less formal experiences comparing a live feed in a recording studio through various A/D/A chains (44.1/16, 48/16, 96/20, and SACD-type DSD) and in the listening room of an audiophile record label feeding 96/24 recordings through a sampling rate converter that enabled us to vary the sampling rate and bit depth at will. Meyer and Moran did note that DVD-A and SACD releases did often sound better than their CD versions, sometimes much better, but this seemed to be a consequence of differences in mixing and mastering rather than anything technical. Running those recordings through a 44.1-kHz/16-bit A/D/A chain resulted in the same sound quality as the original. So if the "hi-res" files sound better, it's not because they're "hi-res." This is what one would (or should) expect, based on what increased sampling rates and bit depths afford in terms of audio performance. Pushing the upper range of the frequency response beyond 22 kHz or the dynamic range beyond 98 dB doesn't buy you anything in perceived sound quality.

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Good points, and I think I've seen bits of that research before. The users listened to headphones and had to go through some sort of "training." Anyhow, the thing that matters to me most is the surround sound that often comes hand-in-hand with "hi-res" recordings, especially in the SACD and DVD-Audio world. There is no denying that listening to a quality Bluray recording of Beethoven's 5th (using lossless DTS-HD Master Audio) in surround is a different world than that same recording in stereo. It is night and day. I do agree that good CD recordings are indistinguishable from stereo DVD-Audio and SACD (quality of the recording, not quality of the format); it's the surround that blows me away.

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