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Welcome to the Future

Discussion in 'High resolution audio' started by wilkes, Aug 22, 2003.

  1. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    Firstly, et me say a big thank you to the boards administrators for starting this new section. I firmly believe that high resolution is here to stay as long as people understand it properly, and AfterDawn is the best place to start.
    Secondly, let us turn this section into one where people can learn, the same as happens in the other boards.
    Finally, welcome to the future.
     
  2. Praetor

    Praetor Moderator Staff Member

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    Me too! Because I know absolutely nothing about audio hehe... if i can hear it i'm happy hehe. Damn I hate that "stupid" feeling ;-)
     
  3. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    On DVD-Audio, you have 2 types of sound files. There is either "standard" wave files, at anything between 16/44.1 to 24/192, and a compressed format called MLP. Multichannel audio is anything from 16/44.1 to 24/96. However, multichannel at 24/88.2 or 24/96 exceeds the available bitrate which is 9.6 MBPS for a DVDA player, so MLP packing becomes compulsory. This is a lossless compression and it works by repacking the stream in a more efficient manner.
    This would have the file extension .mlp as opposed to the more common .wav
    DVDA uses both of these formats, and the decoder for MLP is built into the players. It's not really a conversion, it just "unpacks" the audio again. MLP will also give you a huge space difference as it achieves an average of 50% filesize reduction. In effect, it IS a wave or PCM file. There are no conversions taking place at all.
     
  4. Praetor

    Praetor Moderator Staff Member

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    Hehe I need a tech dictionary already ;-)
     
  5. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    It seems to be instantaneous, which infers it unpacks as it's playing. There's no noticeable lag on my player. I'll check it out (another item in the rapidly growing "to do" list!!)
     
  6. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    No, it doesn't seem to eliminate the 2 sec gap either. I'll get the textbooks out & post back.........
     
  7. tigre

    tigre Moderator Staff Member

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    On playback of lossless codecs like MLP, FLAC, Monkey's Audio etc. (the same applies to lossy) a small part of the file is buffered but generally it's decoded on demand, not the whole file at once. You'd need an extremely powerful processor and a huge ammount of RAM (immagine a full 192KHz/24bit DVD-A consisting of 2 tracks -> several GBs of RAM needed)._X_X_X_X_X_[small]AFTERDAWN FORUM RULES: http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/2487[/small]
     
    Last edited: Aug 23, 2003
  8. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    Yeah, I had ruled out the buffering as an option, basically because i thought that if you fast forwarded or skipped a few tracks, that the processing and RAM needed would be collosal(spelt wrong) and not really feasible. If thats so, then maybe thats why the damn units costs so much :-(
     
  9. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    It's not as dear as you might think. Panasonic do one for £150. I'll try to find the link and model number & post it back. There's also the one I use, the Limit DVD9900SE, which is available at Richer Sounds for around £200. This one does it all. MP3, VCD, DVDA, DVDV, JPEG, DVD-R, CD-R, CD-R/W, DVD-R/W, built in DTS and Dolby Digital decoders and to cap it all is fully multi-regional too.
     
  10. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    If it has component out on the back i may well buy it. I need y, PB/PR, CB/CR for connection to my projector.
     
  11. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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  12. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    It's not the one I have, but it's certainly a full fledged DVDA player.
    Mine is the DVD9900SE, distinguishable by the centre loading tray with display underneath it.
    it does Progressive or interlaced, Pal/NTSC, DD, DTS, MP3, CD, PCM, full 96KHz output - no downsampling unless you switch it in, but look for yourself http://www.richersounds.com/index.php?f=itemdetl.php&p=300260
    and it has £100 off. Only £149.95 - bargain.
    Might go get me another one. You should get the region hack codes too. If you get this and not the codes, email me and I'll send you the info.

    Outputs are:
    L,R,C,LFE,Ls,Rs, L&R stereo, Component colour out, video out, PbCb, PrCr, Svideo, Co-axial, Optical & SCART.
     
    Last edited: Aug 24, 2003
  13. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    That does look like a quality player alright - better than my Plu2 i would say anyway. The progressive scan is a handy function except last time i tried to turn it on for my projector, the screen disappeared and i couldnt get it back until my mate in richer sounds fixed it. What i was wondering, is the remote control for it any good? I hate these lovely looking players that come with stupid big clumsy remotes.
     
  14. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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  15. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    That's a whole new can of worms. I'll post over there later today when I have a half-hour or so. Basically, you're right though as anything much above 20(24 in extreme circumstances) is inaudible. Are we hearing aliasing or artifacts then? anyway - I'll be over ther later.
    BTW, the remote on the limit ain't big & clunky. It covers the DVDV & DVDA functions plus the memory/programming functions.
     
  16. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    It sounds like a great player - i am seriously considering it now, especially since it has progressive scan as well.
    I suppose thats the question the producers are eciding upon when setting the frequencies.
     
  17. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    Not to mention the whole Psychoacoustics issue!
    My gut feeling is to use 96KHz if you can, but anything above this is probably pointless! Also, I still think you get better results if you work at the frequency of your target media.
    However, there is some interesting research going on suggesting that if you put vibration transducers directly in contact with the mastoid bone behind the ear, it does show perception at least as high as 90KHz!! this is percieved and pitched by listeners in the 8-16KHz range though. It appears to be "almost" certain that the perception of these tones is due to subharmonic and "difference-tone intermodulation" than direct perception, so who knows. A good example of this are hard-driven compression drivers, which generate these subharmonics in the ultrasonic range, but you actually hear the difference within the traditional audio band.
    The AES has decided that an upper sampling rate of 60-64KHz will cover all sound "in air", and any audible differences are probably down to filter design. The main areas here seem to be
    1/. - steep sloped filters near the passband having undesired amplitude & phase effects
    2/. passband frequency-response ripple, and
    3/. "pre-echo" due to the phase response of linear phase filters could also be audible.
    The superb "5.1 surround sound - up & running" by Tomlinson Holman has many more discussions on this, also see Bob Katz for more real world observations. The one certain thing is that this whole area is very much open to discussion.
    Finally, how many people actually have the equipment to monitor these frequencies? I wonder just how many of those who claim audible differences have got an aliasing problem in their loudspeakers?
     
  18. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    Does that mean we are hearing it without actually hearing it as such, or that we are not able to distinguish what we are hearing? Am i also right in saying that the sound measured from a driver, will change frequency as it travels through the air?
    I doubt very many could claim differences without having the right equipment to measure it. Therefore, it would be assumed that the audible differences would be down to problems with the Loudspeaker.
     
  19. wilkes

    wilkes Regular member

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    I don't think it's that we can't distinguish what we are hearing, more like we don't always actually hear what's there. The brain is wonderful at interpolating data in a number of ways and seeing or hearing what it thinks it should be, which is why camouflage works and clever illusionists are able to convince you they can do magic.
    A good one, although not strictly speaking an audio one - but related to this discussion, is the oddity in the relationship between picture and sound. There has been a lot of work done that suggests a better sound quality will make you think the picture quality is better.
    There's also Heisenberg's principle. The actual act of measuring something causes changes in that being measured. I wonder if this applies here too?
    As far as frequencies changing as sound travels, this must be true as we all know about the decay in the top end the further away you are from the source.
    For me, the most important and audible changes in hi-res come from using a larger word. Once you get above 96KHz sample rate there really doesn't seem to be much, if any, audible difference. We are talking about 99% of the population 99% of the time now. I'd even go as far as to say with properly designed filters and converters, most people won't hear any changes going above a 48KHz sampling rate.
    How many people do we know that really can hear above 22-24KHz? Most people apparently cannot really hear the difference between PCM and MP3.
    (see various posts in the Audio board for this)
    I guess the usual motto should hold - if it sounds good to you, then it is good enough for you. Personally, I hope the high resolution formats are here to stay, but we need to decide on the sample rates for once and all - the current trend for doubling every other year is bad for studios and worse for the consumer who won't buy anything in case they get stuck with the next betamax. 24/96 is as far as I go until I get a client that wants 24/192 stereo. If this happens I'll go buy the converters but until then i'm staying where I am. It's going to be the limit for multichannel fpr a while anyway as DVDA only allows for 24/192 in stereo and I for one haven't had any enquiries about even this. DVDA players seem to cut off at 96 - some don't even go that far so we need to be careful there too.
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2003
  20. Oriphus

    Oriphus Senior member

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    That is something i have never considered before. As far as im aware Heisenberg's principle relates to uncertainty and more to the point, measurement of position which disturbs a particle's momentum. In our case the particle's momentum would be the frequency of sound. Does this mend that tools used to measure the sound actually cause the sound to be different to its original form. In saying that, doesnt that mean that the ears, brain and sensors used by humans to understand what they are hearing, is actually changing the original sound also. In that case, what we hear is not what is produce, but an interpretation of what we think is there. Am i off the mark a bit with that, or am i following you ok :-(

    If DVDA players cut off at 24/96, then would there ever be a erason to go to 192? Doubling it doesnt seem to make any sense to me.

    Suppose I have a time-varying signal such as a sound wave, and I want to know the exact frequencies in the signal at an exact moment in time. I presume to determine the frequencies accurately, you need to sample the signal for a short time, therefore lose time precision which is needed for sampling sound. In other words, a sound cannot have both a precise time, as in a short pulse, and a precise frequency, as in a continuous pure tone. If this is correct, how do we actually measure sound. Seems to me like a circle of hate lol_X_X_X_X_X_[small]For DVD Back up info: http://www.chrismccann.co.uk
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    Last edited: Aug 25, 2003

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