Hi Peter
Not sure this is the best place to post this on this forum, my apologies if it is inappropriate. I have a few questions, but first a little background. Been an audiophool for about 8 years now, and am a hard core DIYer. I've built several tube amps, and am designing my own currently, as well as having many preamps, cables, and speaker projects, under my belt. I am currently working on a DDAC 1543 kit as supplied by Doede Duma. I have been monitoring the computer audio forum on the audio asylum, and saw the post there, that seemed to cause so much paranoia!;-)
Can't believe the folks there are so paranoid about anybody associated with the "infamous" Bert Doppenberg gang.
If you are not familiar with the DDAC1543 it is a USB DAC which uses an I2S bus and re-clocks with a 11.8mhz (I think), Tent Labs clock to parallel stacked 1543s, in my case two towers of 12 for a total of 24 1543 chips. It uses no op-amp, just a load resistor and capacitor for output after the chips.
Seem as as if this DAC would be a good candidate for your players minimalist philosophy (which I've always gravitated to in audio). Do you agree?
Now for the questions. Does your player bypass the computer sound card? I hope so, because I have a very lousy one in my music server computer (since I was going to bypass it anyway). It's a very small PC commonly called "Pandoras Box", the computer, the 8" LCD touch screen, and external music storage hard drives, are designed to fit on the coffee table in front of my listening position.
I have Windows XP operating system, can I get the best performance with your player with XP, or would I have to upgrade to Vista, or is some other OS optimal? I want pretty much of a no compromise system, so if an upgrade is necessary, so be it.
I am confused about the different versions of XXHighEnd, can you advise as to which would be the most appropriate. I am not a techie by any means, and was really NOT looking forward to the completely bewildering proposal of getting Foobar to work.
Looks like you just may have the solution I was looking for, that is a player that sounds great, stays out of the way of the music, and that you don't have to be a software engineer to implement.
twystd