New Transport Approach


With never-ending advances in technology and tumbling prices, I wonder if any high-end audio CD player manufacturer is considering an approach such as this - populate the player with 700 megabytes of RAM and pre-read the whole CD into RAM. We know this is completely reliable (or else our beloved MS Office wouldn't work). Then the whole transport system could be shut down, eliminating any concerns about mechanical or electrical noise, and the "CD" could be played back straight from RAM through the DAC. It would seem like this would reduce or eliminate jitter completely. There would be an "initialization" time penalty, but I would think for the high-end market, that wouldn't be a huge deal. Any thoughts? -Kirk
kthomas

Showing 1 response by bwhite

From the Meridian website:

In the 800 Reference CD Machine, the audio data is read asynchronously in blocks using high-speed, high-integrity CD ROM drives. This data is checked for integrity, corrected and triple buffered to ensure that the audio output timing is independent of the drives for the first time.