Showing posts with label Sound / Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sound / Music. Show all posts

22 April, 2010

Digital video/audio formats?

I recently acquired myself a hybrid Hi-Fi HD surround receiver to try and organize all my A/V-cables, and also to enhance my listening experience both with music and film.

Honestly, I didn't actually expect to notice any difference between Dolby Digital/DTS surround sound, and the new formats Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD.

But I certainly did.

Dolby Digital (or "DD") was the first fully digitized stream-standard for movie-surround. This means that the audio-track on the DVD/DVR/BD medium is digitally recorded and encoded (analogue soundwaves, converted into computer-data, further reducing distortion and noise).

  • DD uses the AC3 (Audio Codec 3) codec to compress 5.1 surround channels of sound at varying sample-rates of up to 48KHz.
  • DD formats are usually noted as "DD 2.0" or "DD 5.1" on specs (covers,etc.).

Dolby TrueHD (or "DTHD") is the first Dolby-implementation of a high-definition sound codec. Dolby based the DTHD codec on Meridian Lossless Packaging technology, making it a lossless format (meaning, it doesn't compress the audio-data, but stores it fullrange). Because of this, DTHD can handle up to 24Bit 96KHz audio, at an 18MBit/s transfer-rate, over 14 channels. A true High-Definition multi-channel system.

In conclusion, I think HD formats are for enthusiasts. If you aren't an audiophile (like me), chances are you won't even notice any differences. Unless you have a reasonably up-2-date Hi-Fi system with HDMI inputs or at least digital coax/optical inputs.

To put it in other words:

If Dolby Digital "is like going to the cinema"
Dolby TrueHD "IS the cinema"



23 February, 2008

Looks like my luck has turned ;P



Creative SoundBlaster X-Fi Xtreme Audio

Turns out my Digital I/O Module-purchase wasn't a total loss. Just caught a glimpse of an article describing the OSS driver (Open Sound System) working on some of the X-Fi series soundcards. As I went deeper into X-Fi support research, being intrigued by this news, I found that the ALSA project (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) already had a module in-code that is supposed to support the Xtreme Audio version of the X-Fi cards, module "ca0106", the Creative developer describing the module on the open source website of Creative, had not tested the module himself. And, after reading some technical specs of the card, I realized it had an I/O port! Woohoo! Finally! Optical and coaxial SPDIF input and output! ;D

Allright, I'm aware of the fact that this card is a spin-off on the Audigy-chip, and supposedly "half-supported in ALSA, but not mentioned in ALSA support-pages". But further research into this comment revealed that the ALSA project had fixed playback bugs in their new alsa-1.0.15 branch. Despite these negative remarks, I'm going for this card, firstly because it's based on the last Audigy-chip (of which I am perfectly content with), it's not too expensive and it incorporates the Digital I/O port needed for my Digital I/O Module.

If I'd opted for the version above this card, I would have to fork out double the price just for the addition of the X-Fi chip with it's sound crystalizer and EAX Advanced HD capabilities.

As i'm using this card strictly for home cinema viewing and music purposes, I'm not really that concerned about perfect latency or near-noticable distortion reduction.

As I see it, if a source has shit quality, it will sound like shit, no matter how many DSPs (Digital Sound Processor(s)) you pass the source through. And since I'm now using optical SPDIF sources, sound distortion is a non-effect (the superb' wonderful thing about optics compared to copper wiring when it comes to audio, or maybe all transmission purposes I guess).


One thing I came to think about, is the analogue jack-connections I use to connect my VCR-equipment to my computer with, but then again, I could always run a dual-soundcard setup and just patch the stereo-ouput of the Audigy 2 SZ to the X-Fi Xtreme Audio, or maybe even setup an SPDIF bridge internally between the two cards to get complete digital resampling of all my sound-inputs ;P I love cross-connecting equipment.

http://us.creative.com/products/product.asp?category=209&subcategory=669&product=15855


12 February, 2008

Hahaha!


Format-krigen var latterlig fra dag 1, Sony gjorde det rette da de la Blu-Ray som standard for PS3 og reduserte maskinen i pris.
Faktisk er ikke ekstra tilbehør og spill så hemningsløst dyrt heller, har til og med benyttet Playstation Online Store, hvor jeg kjøpte klassiske PS-One spill for 30/45,-/stk, hele PS3-titler utviklet for PS-Store og spesielt online-gaming, for alt fra 40,- til 199,-. Jeg liker Sony ;)

Microsoft kan forsåvidt også smile siden de ikke la inn noen spesiell form for HD-spiller i sin konsoll, det må anskaffes som ekstra-utstyr.

http://www1.vg.no/teknologi/artikkel.php?artid=510739

10 February, 2008

Spintables, I'm jealous


Spin!-Spin!!-SPIN!!! Mayn, can't wait until I can afford a decent setup. I really enjoyed watching Christian rippin'up tunes on this ;P

09 February, 2008

A true music composer


The whole studio-setup ;] me like... Go on Tommy-Boy! ;D

08 February, 2008

Digital audio I/O connection module

I've decided I'm going for a Creative® Digital I/O Module.
To complete my sound-setup with all audio-connection abilities. Mature connection-plugs let's me rid myself of the clumsy RCA-2-Jack cables lying all around as well... I just hope the soundcard processes the signals through hardware, and not software.

If it happens to be software, I may be in the dark for a while, cos' I'm running all-OSS (Open Source Software) on the machine in question. Let's just cross our fingers ;P the module only costs some £19 = approx. 205 NOK.

Read more about my audio-setup here.

Update February 13, 2008
As it turns out, it DOES pass through hardware, BUT...it doesn't work on my SB Audigy 2 ZS, mainly because what I THOUGHT was a digital I/O port, was in reality just a digital out port :( Looks like I've got to wait for the Creative X-Fi open source drivers and go for an X-Fi card. Oh Creative, why did you assemble a digital I/O port on the Value-version, and not the original?

Ah well...(ballz!)...

01 February, 2008

Home cinema setup



My Hitachi PJTX100 3-panel LCD HD-projector, which can produce from 30 to 300 inches of 720P High Def imagery ;-) I know, it's not FULL HD, but who f****n' cares, I DARE ya to find a projector that can produce that kind of quality for right under 6000 NOK = approx. 1100 USD (used, and not that bad a price, considering it's only 2 years old, well, 1 when I bought it, and it's been to service 1 time).

02.02.2008 - A little update on my setup:

Connected to the projector:
2 x computers via S-VIDEO switch
1 x Playstation TWO via component
1 x Playstation 3 via component
1 x VCR (which amplifies the TV-cable input) via SCART-2-composite

The sound-part:

I'm currently using my desktop-computer (running vanilla Slackware Linux 12.0) as a sound-hub, dispersing analogue 5.1 sound through a Creative Audigy 2 ZS (v1, NOT VALUE!)
soundcard. Best PCI-card I have EVER bought! Bargain really, considering I bought it unboxed ;P at 400 NOK = $73. It has a plethora of different audio connectors I've never seen on a card that wasn't meant for studio-production. Allthough, newer soundcards incorporate both mature Coax & Optical SPDIF's, this card presents the connection-abilities I need. It can be frustrating for a person with absolutely no experience with audio-connectors, since it requires some rather unusual RCA-2-Jack connectors for Coaxial SPDIF-input. In it's day, it was the only commercially available soundcard to sport 24Bit/96Khz audio sampling for home-users, and it has more than enough audio processing power to not even diffuse the superb' TOSLINK audio quality of my Playstation 3 (that serves as the CD-audio, DVD-audio and MP3-audio playback unit in the setup)...



...and it connects through jack-connectors to my "NOT-so-outdated" Creative Inspire 5800
speaker-set, according to a friend @ work. He told me the company takeover Creative did on speaker manufacturer "Cambridge SoundWorks" (note the "Creative" signia-logo on the site) liftet their stand on the Hi-Fi market. And surprisingly, my speaker-set incorporates some pretty decent speaker-elements ;D For a 5.1 Hi-Fi set at 800 NOK = $145. "A budget-system, but nonetheless it out-rivals other systems of same quality at higher prices!"



Also running from the soundcard, using a jack-splitter on the center/subwoofer channel, is a DIY 10" subwoofer w/monoblock amplification.

All-in-all the system setup sports the ability to decode the following surround formats using hardware codecs: Dolby Digital / Dolby Digital EX / DTS / Dolby ProLogic and Dolby ProLogic II, giving flexibility as well as superb sound quality for petty cash ;D

Connected to the soundcard:
1 x notebook via jack-2-coaxial SPDIF
1 x Playstation TWO via component-RCA
1 x Playstation 3 via TOSLINK
1 x VCR via SCART-2-RCA

RCA connects via cheap sound-switch.

And yes, I don't go to the cinemas anymore, it's just not worth the price they charge. Freedom of choice bit***s! ^_^

31 January, 2008

My trustworthy MP3-player B-)



It's pretty cool working for an IT-/ISP-company, especially when you receive really cool christmas gifts, like this Creative Stone 1GB MP3-player :P