Tuner. I have lived in many cities and now reside in Seattle. There are truly amazing radio stations here that are commercial free. Some talk and fund drives but mostly just music and community supported. It is nice to listen to professional DJs; they bring alot to the table.
Here it is now 2011. . . .It would be interesting to see the same posts today. I'm betting the Mac Mini or PC would top the list. Anybody out there????
I'm using a 17 inch Mac pro interfaced with my iPod classic going into the Inova.. I am also using the Oppo 95 for blue rays and CD, SACD Going straight into the INOVA,and I am thrilled with the results Thus far speakers are Magnapans 1.7 For a budget based system like this based on the INOVAS vision I think the future of audio is based more on a system as this
I currently use my xbox which I have basically turned into a media server which can pull from my mac. It's pretty easy to set up, and works pretty well. I am just now getting involved in the audio community and am still learning the "ropes", but I have plans on buying a good tuner and system.
My most used source is my Denon Blu-ray player, followed by my AppleTV which I use to stream Netflix and what TV shows I buy off of iTunes.
I do not have cable or a dish but I buy a lot of tv shows on DVD and movies on Blu-ray. That is why the above is so, however, when it comes to music the only source that I use is my Pro-Ject Xtension Turntable.
Streaming spotify. I could probably live with a pair of dynaudio xeo 5's with a peachtree i-dac with an i-phone streaming spotify. It would be the simpliest, cleanest system I can think of and still sound really quite good.
While vinyl is still unrivaled, my Empirical Audio Mac Mini raid music server is most used and close to vinyl using dsd files through Pure Music. It is so easy to merely touch the Ipad screen and have the music play. No getting the disc or record out, putting it in the player, listening, and removing and return it to storage.
I have been in audio for a long time and remember my father buying a Capart console unit with stereo which no one had ever heard of. Ultimately we got a FM station that played some stereo and shortly after that got stereo records. I remember one had a choice-mono for $1 and stereo for $2.
Later I lived in Philadelphia and later yet outside NYC and experienced quality, stereo FM. Today I still have a public FM station with jazz in the afternoons and classical other times. It is not quality programing, however. I listen always to it but in the car. Texas is not a good place to listen to quality FM jazz.
I too use my Ãtude tuner most, just for casual listening which is what I do most of the time, while I am doing other things. But for serious listening my turntable sees the most attention. CD ranks third, but perhaps a new CD player could change that? Time will tell.
Turntable here. Maine radio content is scant at best, and the NPR affiliate just keeps getting blander and blander. I have many may hundreds of CD's and a PLEX-based media server, but I've been listening overwhelmingly to LP's for the past 4-5 years after a 25-year hiatus.
CD player and turntable. Which one is used more depends on the format of the music I most recently purchased. Right now I just bought a bunch of used albums so the turntable is now getting a workout.
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