Peter, I just installed XXHighEnd-09-x3 on another Vista computer. Since this is not a "computer issue", no R&D money from the big companies will ever be spent here since for them it is not a problem. So efforts of the audio community have focuses in this area: bit perfect drivers, jitter reducers, jitter immune DACs, etc. It is in the audio receiving end that something is happening (this also applies to the sound card that takes the digital signal and converts it to SPDIF or I2S or something else) It is only when the signal ends in an audio type of device that we claim there are "problems", so if we use the same logic, the signal exiting the computer is fine. In fact, every bit that moves inside the computer does not change because you changed the hardware configuration, or else you will have the computer behaving erratically.Įven if the digital signal leaves the computer, it will be received at the other end exactly the same, through any transport and protocol. The problem with jitter in the digital domain inside a computer has been solved because you can't afford to have unreliable communication. There could be bugs in the software, but the hardware is basically operating on those bugs. Why is that? because everything inside the computer is digital and even at the lower logic voltages and higher bus speeds, the computer still works flawlessly.
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