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Super Audio CDs Rolling Your Way

donutello writes "Slate is running an article about the Rolling Stones Remastered series discs having two layers: CD and SACD. The article contains some interesting information about how Sony is sneakily distributing SACD players without the buyers noticing it. This FAQ provides some information about SACDs. Don't expect to be able to play or reproduce these on your computer anytime soon. The SACD format contains a physical watermark on the disc. SACD players will only play discs with valid watermarks. Music watermarks had two opponents: The audiophiles who didn't like their music distorted and people who didn't like the watermarks preventing copying of the music. With the physical watermarks, they have found a way to appease the former while still stopping the latter thus causing a break in the ranks of the opposition."

437 comments

  1. i dont hear any screams... by packeteer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... for a new better cd format

    sorry but cd's work jsut fine and i dont see this catching on as a replacement for old cd's

    --
    unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    1. Re:i dont hear any screams... by mstrjon32 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've heard SACD's and personally they might not be a necessary replacement for everyone, but they do sound pretty good if you've got a higher end audio system. Once the players fall in price a bit...or maybe software comes out which will let me play back these things on my DVD-ROM (I wish.) I will start buying them. I've been looking forward to a higher end audio format for a while.

    2. Re:i dont hear any screams... by mpsmps · · Score: 2, Informative

      Then you aren't listening very hard (but I guess that's the point).

      Many people now own 5.1 speaker systems for home theatre or computer games and would like more than stereo sound. Also, the quantization noise of the Redbook standard is audible on a good stereo and audiophiles have been pushing for higher-resolution digital recordings for years. A quick search of Stereophile gives about 100 articles hosted on that site alone. Whatever you think about audiophiles (and some of their beliefs are rather dubious to say the least), they represent a significant group of wealthy people who are willing to spend a lot of money on music.

    3. Re:i dont hear any screams... by slaker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm screaming for something better. I listen to classical music and dammit, an orchestra is awesome in as many channels as possible, unlike, say, bass-heavy pop music.

      Sony has a low-end SACD 5-disc changer for something like $150, if you don't need an on-board decoder (i.e., you have a receiver that has 5.1 inputs).

      DVD-A has the supreme advantage of sounding better than CD even if you don't have a DVD-A player. Every DVD-A I've bought will play (if not the full 96kHz/192kHz tracks) in a regular DVD-ROM device.

      --
      -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
    4. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Malc · · Score: 1

      I bought a couple of DVD-Audio and DTS CDs 18 months ago to try them out. My system is far from high-end with a CDN$300 receiver and some small Polk Audio speaks (CDN$800???). The increase in quality and the feeling of increased immersion in to the music was quite surprising.

    5. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Malc · · Score: 1

      BTW, those prices were from 2.5 years ago when 5.1 sound setups were more expensive.

    6. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please use proper punctuation.

    7. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Take a regular CD player, slap an SACD logo on it, sell it to them for 3x the price and laugh and they mention "how much better it sounds".

    8. Re:i dont hear any screams... by packeteer · · Score: 1

      sorry to say but MOST music sounds the same on mono than 5.1 encoded... personally i do enjoy high quality music but if the masses of pop-listeners dont want this IT WONT GET CHEAP... as it is now anything related to cd's is CHEAP because they can sell to everyone... it worth it to buy a regular nice setup with regular cd's than to buy and overproced new system

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    9. Re:i dont hear any screams... by ces · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Friend of mine has high-end amps and speakers on his along with a SACD compatable DVD player. He recently demoed the "Bach - The Brandeberg Concertos" multichannel SACD for me. Awesome does not begin to describe the experience. It sounded like there was a live chamber orchestra in the room.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    10. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      posts like this crack me up
      story posted at 9:10
      your response 9:11
      why don't you go read the article and learn something instead of trying to get the first "+1 insightful"

    11. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not true. DVD-A when played in a non DVD-A capable player will only play the regular Dolby Digital track. It is true that you are getting 5.1 channels, but each channel has undergone Dolby Digital *lossy* compression much like MP3. So the actual quality of the the non DVD-A version is worse than CD.

      Some DVD-A discs also have a supplemental DTS 5.1 channel track for those without DVD-A players. DTS also uses lossy compression but it sounds better than Dolby Digital. DTS also supports 24/96 resolution (in lossy compressed form again), some people say that this version can be as good as a good CD. But it is still not close to the true 24/96 or even 24/192 resolution of the DVD-A tracks. Those tracks need a DVD-A capable player to be heard.

      I just wanted to clear that up.

    12. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i couldn't agree more. most "audiophiles" are just a bunch of elitist fuckers who just need something to substantiate their existance and spend their money on.

    13. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those of us who don't like the low frequency range, inaccurate sampling and digital noise of CD's are still using LPs.

      (and yes, there is also noise on LPs, but that's analog noise, and easier for the brain to filter out).

    14. Re:i dont hear any screams... by evilmonkey_666 · · Score: 1

      But you can already get 5.1 surround sound on regular CDs!

      http://www.dtsonline.com/home/51music.pdf

      This is obviously just an unnessesary upgrade to attempt to further restrict our fair use rights.

      --


      - PS. This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R where eliminated.
    15. Re:i dont hear any screams... by erasmus_ · · Score: 1

      Interesting, but I wish they had more of an explanation on the site about this option. Even off the main page, they link only to this pdf file with cds, which is a very small list for someone who really listens to a lot of music. Clearly this must be either a difficult or more expensive option, or else a lot more people would be taking advantage of it. Have you personally heard any of these cds in this format?

      --
      Please subscribe to see the more insightful version of th
    16. Re:i dont hear any screams... by evilmonkey_666 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've got most of them.

      They do sound A LOT better. If you don't believe me just talk to the people in alt.audio.dts

      The problem is, as many people have pointed out the market is small because you need a decoder.

      My point was though that we as consumers don't actually need any Super Audio CD Crap. The capacity on a regular CD is more than enough for high quality, multi-channel sound. Because of the excellent compression we have now compared to the 70s when the CD Audio standard was made.

      --


      - PS. This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R where eliminated.
    17. Re:i dont hear any screams... by RoofPig · · Score: 1

      Like they say, audiophiles listen to equipment instead of music.

    18. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      no it didn't

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    19. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck off you ignorant cunt

    20. Re:i dont hear any screams... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....a bunch of elitist fuckers who just need something to substantiate their existance and spend their money on.

      hey, when did this turn into a linux debate?

    21. Re:i dont hear any screams... by ncstockguy · · Score: 1

      Gee, are the Stones still putting out albums?

  2. What kind of CD by batboy78 · · Score: 1

    Have these been approved my the Compact Disc forum? Has fair use gone out the window?

    1. Re:What kind of CD by Hollins · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Phillips, which developed the CD standard, collaborated with Sony in developing SACD. Sony appears to be trying to avoid repeating the Betamax mistake by licensing the technology.

      I'm not happy about the watermarking, and won't buy them at first, but I think it has a good chance of catching on, since the transition path is virtually transparent, and costs nearly identical.

      The audio quality of SACD is significantly better than traditional CDs, even on typical home audio systems.

      The players still have analog outputs. I suspect mp3s ripped in real time will sound pretty decent.

    2. Re:What kind of CD by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, they have not been approved, this is a Sony "standard". DVD-A (DVD-Audio) is a real standard, and more labels than just Sony's are producing material in this format.

      There are players than support both SACD and DVD-A, I guess those are okay, not that I'd touch a SACD. Sony does make SACD only players.

      Here are some facts about Sony's SACD players. They don't have a digital output. So that $1500+ DAC that you have is going to do no good. Sony wants only analog coming out of their box. Sony says this will get you better quality, cause most recievers won't be able to decode the 96kHz/24-bit audio as well as their built in decoder. I think they are wrong. Just about anyone who is adopting the better than CD formats at this point will surely have a better quality DAC than what they put in the box.

      I'm not sure about the region coding on SACDs, but I know for a fact that DVD-A don't have any sort of region coding on their audio only portion. They are like regular CDs. If they include a standard DVD session it can contain all the usual DVD codes, including regions, but the ones I've seen have been region free. Also the DVD-A players I've seen have had TOS-link and/or S/PDIF outs.

      I have a full Sony setup at my house, but I'm not going to buy any more Sony gear. They are restricting content more and more, while other companies are freeing up more (see the majority of DVD players with region hacks, except Sony's). You can't trust a content provider to produce content players that let you use the content as you want.

    3. Re:What kind of CD by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 2

      Perhaps I was not hard enough on DVD-A. I was just looking at the specs. I don't like it much either from a technical stand point, but at least it is a ratified standard.

      Problems with DVD-A:

      Copyprotection, uses a system called Content Protection for Pre-recorded Media (CPPM). It is a bit like CSS (they were going to use CSS-II until DeCSS was released). But the keys are 56-bit not 40. It also has a nasty feature that encrypted data can include a list of revoked keys. So if a manufacturer does something the media producers don't like they can disable their players from playing all new releases. The list of revoked keys is updated every 3 months. So if someone cracks CPPM they better find all the keys, to totally break the usefulness of this feature.

      There is also watermarking included in the audio stream. It was designed to not be audible, yet can be detected in an analog output. I think if it can be detected by equipment is has to be doing something not natural to the content. That is what Sony was getting at with their physical watermarking system.

      Oh well. I'll just have to be happy with my harddisk recordings of my friend's bands. They are high quality and not molested. Otherwise I'll wait for Harman Kardon to come out with a player, they seem to be looking out for the consumers.

    4. Re:What kind of CD by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 5, Informative

      1. SACDs don't store data using 96KHz/24bit PCM. They use 2.82/1 bit Direct Stream Digital. (PCM records a 24 bit volume sample, 96000 times a second. A Direct Stream Digital recording simply indicates whether the sound should be louder or softer than before. DSD is also (generically) known as pulse width modulation.

      Think of sending directions to a plotting device. One method (PCM) should say (0,0),(pi/2, 1), (pi, 0), (3pi/2, -1), (2pi, 0). The DSD way says up,down,down,up ...

      There are a number of supposed benefits to recording using Direct Stream Digital, but it's difficult to edit without converting first to PCM.
      Many DVD-Audio players limit the resolution of the S/PDIF output to 48 KHz.

      The Sharp DX -SX1 SACD player has digital output (admttedly its proprietary, but so what? Most DACS can't decode PWM)...

    5. Re:What kind of CD by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 2

      Oh yeah, I had forgotten about that. DSD encoding is reported to have flaws when it comes to high frequencies, causing distortions.

      I think the only benifits to DSD is the ease of converting to analog. It is harder to encode.

      You are right about the limit of DVD-A players that have digital outs. I was also forgetting that 2 channel DVD-A can be as high as 192kHz/24-bit PCM. I don't have a DAC that will do that. I was mentioning Harman Kardon in another post. The have a straight DVD player that will output that high from the S/PDIF. I really want to see what they'll offer in a DVD-A/SACD player.

    6. Re:What kind of CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DV/DA.... ha. Dual Vaginal, Dual anal. Ouch.

    7. Re:What kind of CD by jojolapin · · Score: 1

      How can such a post full of errors be scored 5 ? He dares call theses "facts".... - DSD has nothing to do with 96/24, it's not pcm, and it can't be decoded with a dac. - The sacd has no region coding.

    8. Re:What kind of CD by SuperDuperMan · · Score: 1

      What will Harman Kardon come out with that is better than SACD or DVD-A? They surely won't come out with their own Disc standard so the only thing you will be waiting for is a Harman Kardon player that plays the same SACD/DVD-A discs as the other companies play. It won't output digital to your receiver either until the standard is defined and then everybody will do it.

    9. Re:What kind of CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only you knew about Harmon International's practices in their industry. They buy up small entrepreneurial audio companies with innovative products and turn them into talentless consumer goods makers. Many talented, aspiring people don't have the same opinion of Harmon that you do.

      Besides, Harmon will be soon introducing a DVD-A player with the same copy protection limitations of all the other DVD-A players.

      Also some facts to add/straighten out:

      1. Many SACDs are 'dual-layer' - they have both an SACD layer and a regular old-fashioned CD layer. The discs will play in all regular CD players as regular CDs. Thus ensuring backwards compatibility. Those of us that like copying music can still 'rip' the CD layer.

      2. SACDs do not have any form of region coding, they are more like regular CDs in that many of them will actually play in your CD player. DVD-A discs on the other hand require a DVD player to play the regular lossy-compressed material and a proper DVD-A player to play proper DVD-A content.

      3. Neither DVD-A or SACD have a digital output yet. This will be implemented as a secure standard is developed. The internal DACs in many of the SACD/DVD-A players is of good quality. Many of the players (mostly the Sony ones) are excellent CD players at their respective price points. In other words they have good internal DACs. Which also means that a $1500 Sony SACD player is likely to sound as good as that $1500 outboard DAC playing regular CDs. I generally dislike Sony, but I have to (grudgingly) admit that they've done a good job with their current SACD/CD players and even their current SACD/DVD players.

      There are SACD players out there for as little as $150 some are even combo SACD/DVD players at that price. One cannot go wrong trying the format, after all - one actually like what one is hearing!

    10. Re:What kind of CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why doesn't the slashdot moderating system have a "Wrong" field for posts like this? This post isn't overrated its just plain bollocks!

    11. Re:What kind of CD by chefren · · Score: 1
      DVD-A (DVD-Audio) is a real standard, and more labels than just Sony's are producing material in this format.


      Several small audiophile record companies are also producing material for the SACD-format.


      Here are some facts about Sony's SACD players. They don't have a digital output. So that $1500+ DAC that you have is going to do no good.


      Not that they would do you any good anyway: DACs don't do DSD-encoded streams. You can use DACs with the digital PCM output on Sony players, however, but only with CDs. Since PCM is a late 1970s compromise anyway I'm not sure I care.

      I'm not sure about the region coding on SACDs


      There isn't any.


      They are restricting content more and more

      How? By forcing SACDs to have a watermark as proof that they are not copies? By making piracy harder (in contrast to video-DVD-style copy "protection" which does not hinder mass production of pirated DVDs but rather (kind of) hinders DVD playback on Linux.)?

    12. Re:What kind of CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have a full Sony setup at my house, but I'm not going to buy any more Sony gear.

      I've bought plenty of Sony in the past -- cameras, Walkmen (of various kinds) and, or course, CDs. But never again; they're on my relatively short "permanent boycott" list now. They even beat Microsoft onto it.

    13. Re:What kind of CD by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      The have a straight DVD player that will output that high from the S/PDIF.

      No, they don't. SPDIF does NOT allow more than 20 bits at 48Khz in stereo if memory serves. They must be using a different output format. It's been done before - witness 5.1.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    14. Re:What kind of CD by Free+Bird · · Score: 1

      [BLOCKQUOTE]No, they have not been approved, this is a Sony "standard". DVD-A (DVD-Audio) is a real standard, and more labels than just Sony's are producing material in this format.[/BLOCKQUOTE]

      WRONG! This standard was made by Philips and Sony, the same companies that made the original CD (well Philips made it and Sony just shove some money their way). In other words: if there's any "real" standard, this is it.

    15. Re:What kind of CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I won't be buying any more Sony gear either, for the following reasons:-

      1) Sony equipment is overpriced. You pay through the nose for the brand name.

      2) Sony DVD equipment is a nightmare to modify, compared to other manufacturers' equipment.

      3) Sony games consoles use poor quality CD or DVD units which wear out, many within 12 months. If Sony don't like this statement, tough luck. I've got 15 dead PlayStations at home to prove this point. My mate's PS2 packed in after 3 months. And don't forget all those duff ones they brought out at the start, which kept blowing power supplies!

      4) Panasonic equipment lasts longer! Spoke to an employee of Sony (works at Bridgend, S. Wales). Not too long ago they took a set off their shelves, went out and bought a Panasonic plus another cheaper make. The purpose? Find out how the competition do things, presumably in order to nick the best ideas. Tested to destruction, the cheap one failed first, then the Sony. The Panasonic outlasted the pair of them.

      IN A NUTSHELL, SONY HAVE A REPUTATION FOR QUALITY THAT IT DOES NOT DESERVE.

      If you want a games console, buy an X-Box. Okay, I know it's Micro$oft, but it kicks PS2 ass, is easier to modify and can't be any less reliable than the PS2!
      If you want anything else, buy Panasonic. Or Technics. They're both part of the same company (Matsushita) and they make quality kit.

  3. Yamaha CD Writer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Recent Yamaha CDRW drives can do watermarks on CDs, wonder if this is the same thing.

  4. Re:Flamebait, or Troll? by HimalayanRoadblock · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Flamebait is ASKING for a fuckin response. A troll is just stupid.

  5. Innovation by batboy78 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Companies like Sony are spending all their time trying to make music "safe from piracy" that their hasn't been any useful upgrades to the CDR technology, other then 40X CD-Burners where is the next step? Blue-Laser? High-density CDR's?

    1. Re:Innovation by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 2

      DVD-R seems like a useful upgrade to CD-R. But copying those 27GB Blu-Ray discs might be a problem if The Man never makes any Blu-Ray-ROM or Blu-Ray-R drives.

    2. Re:Innovation by Megane · · Score: 2
      But copying those 27GB Blu-Ray discs might be a problem if The Man never makes any Blu-Ray-ROM or Blu-Ray-R drives.

      Making Blu-Ray players might be a problem if nobody makes any Blu-Ray-ROM drives. Have you ever opened up a cheap DVD player? The cheap ones have IDE drives inside.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    3. Re:Innovation by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 2

      Making Blu-Ray players might be a problem if nobody makes any Blu-Ray-ROM drives. Have you ever opened up a cheap DVD player? The cheap ones have IDE drives inside.

      The movie studios probably consider that a mistake that they don't intend to make again. Looks like Sony is doing something similar with SACD.

    4. Re:Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So much for "convergence" then.

  6. Mac Hall attacks! by Hilleh · · Score: 2, Informative

    The excellent comic strip, Mac Hall, started a series of comics about this complete bullshit on monday. And I was just about to buy a new discman too..... What brands are "safe" to buy?

    1. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by xmnemonic · · Score: 1

      Excellent? Come on, the artwork is good, but they are rarely actually funny. Penny Arcade is far better.

    2. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by moonbender · · Score: 2

      Series is quite strong a word for one single strip, but more power to you for pimping Mac Hall, it really does rule. :P

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    3. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I think the exact same thing about Penny Arcade...

      BTW, I get PA's jokes. I just don't find them funny.

    4. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Hilleh · · Score: 1
      Well, ya know...I said series because I just went all crazy and assumed that the "to be continued" on the bottom meant it was going to be continued. Am I getting to technical here? Please let me know. :P

      ....Yeah, you're right. I was just pimping mac hall. :)

    5. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find Mac Hall and Penny Arcade to be equally funny. That is, not funny at all.

      However, Mac Hall has some really nice colour shading in the artwork.

    6. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you just blindly post after skiming the article? It says that *SONY* is doing this.

    7. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After reading several Penny Arcade strips I was forced to conclude that it isn't funny. Your mileage may vary.

    8. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by jx100 · · Score: 1

      BTW, the second strip is out.

    9. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by moonbender · · Score: 2

      Okay, I give in, now it's a series. ;)

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    10. Re:Mac Hall attacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't take my advice on what diskmen to buy. This (short) series is more an excuse to be goofy than a crusade against TEH MAN. As far as I know, Sony is not actually sneaking robotic arm-jabbers into its players

      -Matt Boyd

  7. The labels seem to have forgotten... by sailor420 · · Score: 1

    While this seems like a pretty good idea, the labels seem to have forgotten... As long as the music can be listened to, it can be copied.

    It doesnt take much to run a line out to a computer and record the input to whatever format suits your fancy. Sure, not as easy, and not *as* good sound, but it sure isnt bad, and it isnt hard either.

    Whoops. There goes their vaunted Copy Protection. And Im probably in violation of the DMCA, too.

    1. Re:The labels seem to have forgotten... by saarbruck · · Score: 1

      they haven't forgotten at all... that's what the SSSCA and CBDTPA are all about: plugging confounding analog hole.

      If they could silently slip copy protection into all the hardware don't you think they'd do that, too?

      --
      I am the very model of a modern major general!
    2. Re:The labels seem to have forgotten... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever heard of SDMI Phase I and Phase II? Get the devices out in the market with Phase I, then, one day, release music with Phase II watermarks.

      Suddenly everyone has to "upgrade" to crippleware firmware or lose the ability to play new music.

  8. How long... by gearheadsmp · · Score: 0

    Until DePSP is published?

  9. oh yeah? by BrainInAJar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If sacd becomes widespread, undoubtedly they'll make sacd-rom. When that happens, either they won't play, or they'll play right on to "pirates'" harddrives.

    If they make drivers that prevent that, then the /. crew will find a way around it, or cry bloody murder (or both), a la CSS. If they don't make sacdrom, *I'll* cry bloody murder, because the only optical reader I have is connected to my 2nd IDE channel (and besides, audio-out --> line-in fixes that issue no problem)

    1. Re:oh yeah? by mstrjon32 · · Score: 1

      SACD's are pressed on DVD media. I would imagine that it wouldn't be too difficult to copy the SACD layer onto a blank DVD-R and then perhaps a mod-chipped SACD player could be used to playback/copy the disc. You should be able to read the disk in any DVD-ROM, of course you probably won't be able to do anything with it...yet. If the format catches on (and I hope it does!) then eventually a method will be developed by someone to copy the discs. SACD's should make for some high quality AAC mp4's...I must say.

  10. SACD, DVD, Audio DVD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What happened to Audio DVD's. This looks like a DVD backword compatible with CD.

    WhatMeWorry?

  11. audiophiles use records (if they can be found) by BoomerSooner · · Score: 0

    cd's have been intentionally made shitty to avoid the copying of perfect quality. I fucking hate the greedy people in this country. No wonder it's going to hell in a handbasket.

    Greed != Good (or Greed Good for you ASP types)

  12. Sony = Lick me where I pee. by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Informative
    I have seen more articles on Sony and their attempts at denying the right of fair use then I care to.

    Celine be damned, the software that comes with the new Sony PCs, and their mp3 'solution' on the the minidisk player. ect, ect. Whatever. I haven't been buying Sony's overpriced crap-tronics, or their over-hyped and under-talented CDs and I won't be in the future.

    The giant will never fall unless *everyone* throws stones.

    1. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sony = Lick me where I pee.

      Your vagina?

    2. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Lochin+Rabbar · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      If you think women pee from their vaginas I guess you'll need a roadmap to find a clitoris.

    3. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually they do. You may as well call the location where the urethra ends the vagina. After all, the clitoris in a male turns into a dick, and the urethra is right below it in a female.

    4. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by __dtrance · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I read this as you wanted sony to clean your toilet with their tongues.

      Well, that's assuming that you use a toilet....

      For interesting effects, you could pee into some poison ivy.......

    5. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Ig0r · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You might as well call the location where you talk from the anus. After all, they're both connected to the same pipes.

      --
      Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
    6. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After all, the clitoris in a male turns into a dick,

      If that was true then males would have labia.

    7. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OT but anyway...
      The labia seals up and becomes the scrotum when the 'become male' signal is acted on.

      You can lead a fool to wisdom, but you can't make them think.

    8. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Ripping+Silk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      or even more interesting, on an electric fence...

      --
      this is not a flawless plan.. this is inspiration
    9. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 0

      Sony's right to protect their music far exceeds any "right" you think you have to fair use. Your fair use is to listen to the CD you've purchased directly.

      If you can beat Sony's copy protection, more power to you. Then your fair use right remains intact. If not, tough shit.

    10. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by Lochin+Rabbar · · Score: 1

      They also forms the sheath and soft tissue in the penis. The phallus develops to become either a glans penis or a clitoris. The notion that penis equals clitoris is as accurate as the notion that the vagina and the urethra are the same thing.

    11. Re:Sony = Lick me where I pee. by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

      Ren: Oh, you like the game? Well, how do you like this?! (unzips fly and pees on game)

      (Loud Explosion)

      Devil: So, you whizzed on the electric fence, eh?

      (Background Singers) Don't whiz on the electric fence!

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  13. Independent recording? by Space+Coyote · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is the watermark system going to affect how people produce music? Say for example, the SACD format becomes adopted as the standard audio format. If I own a small record label, how am I supposed to distribute my bands' music? Will I have to pay some arbitrary royalty fee to someone like Sony just so people can listen to music? Will such fees and required equipment make the barrier to entry for the recording business significantly higher? This kind of thing affects many more people than just your average slashdotter with an mp3 habbit.

    --
    ___
    Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
    1. Re:Independent recording? by tato+(and+tato+only) · · Score: 5, Informative
      If this law is passed, it will be a felony even to try to produce works in this format without a license, and there will be no obligation for a license to be made available to your small label at any price. Small labels and independent artists lose.

      Keep your unimpaired CD players, people.

      --
      tato (and tato only)
      This post is strictly opinion, including the spelling.
    2. Re:Independent recording? by RaboKrabekian · · Score: 2

      I think if SA-CD ever becomes a defacto standard, you'll see players that are backward compatible with CD-ROMs. There's no way that the majority of people are going to replace hjuge CD collections with SA-CDs.

      That being said, the quality of the standard CD format is more than enough for home recording, I would think.

      --
      "Moderate drinking can help prevent amputated limbs" -- Abigail Zuger, NYTimes, 12/31/02
    3. Re:Independent recording? by rodgerd · · Score: 1, Troll

      Congratulations, you've noticed one of the less-discussed aspects of DVD (and now DVD-A/ SACD) models.

      It goes, "Fuck you, indie shithead. You knuckle under, you suck our cock, and maybe we'll buy your company with loose change and pay your artists a few pennies on the CD, like we do with our artists".

    4. Re:Independent recording? by beni1207 · · Score: 1

      All current players are compatible with standard CDs, and the Sony player I have (DVP-NS500V) also includes digital outputs for the CD and DVD capabilities. No SACD player will ever include digital outs for the SACD stream afaik, but considering the significantly higher quality of SACDs compared to standard CDs, this is something that can be handled. SACD is also significantly higher-resolution than DVD-A, by the way.

    5. Re:Independent recording? by Wolfier · · Score: 2

      Who cares. If I were to make my own contents, I'd put them in Ogg Vorbis. Or MP3. Or CD. Heck, I might even record it to casettes.

      Most people who have access to SACD players probably have what it needs to play almost all of the above formats anyways.

      If your contents are good, they won't care.

    6. Re:Independent recording? by TC+(WC) · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's bullshit... Do you seriously buy casette tapes now? If they managed to make this the standard, the mainstream would stop purchasing other formats. Of course, I doubt that the consumer would allow them to screw everyone out of their CD collections by not making all these players backwards compatible with standard audio CDs. Sony's players are all backwards compatible at this point and the 'Technology' section of the site linked in the article infers that they plan to continue this practice.

    7. Re:Independent recording? by wfrp01 · · Score: 2

      I agree. Makes me wonder, though, if someone will have the audicity to propose outlawing non-copyprotected forms of distribution. As long as we retain our freedom, this format will entertain some lawyers and clueless corporate boss people at Sony for awhile and then die an expensive death. Hopefully someone clueful at Sony will notice the waste and some heads will roll.

      Makes me mad that Sony would even try this though. I've been admiring their latest laptops. I was going to buy one, but since they keep pulling this kind of shit, I changed my mind.

      --

      --Lawrence Lessig for Congress!
    8. Re:Independent recording? by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 0

      Why must you spread FUD? The thing itself is bad enough without you baldfaced lying about it.

      It will not be a felony to produce any work without a license. Why do you think you need to lie to make something look worse - it's bad on its face without your disinformation and sky-is-falling-ism. People can still produce independent recording all they want.

    9. Re:Independent recording? by ces · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wonder if the real point of all of the "content-control" efforts by the RIAA and the MPAA isn't to lock the little guy out of the market and ensure their place as middle men?

      The real fear isn't that rampant piracy is going to wipe the labels and the studios out, its that changing technology is going to render them irrelevant.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    10. Re:Independent recording? by chefren · · Score: 1

      How come many small audiophile companies already have released SACD titles then? (opus3, chesky, telarc (which is not *that* small),...)

    11. Re:Independent recording? by richieb · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It will not be a felony to produce any work without a license.

      You are right. You will be able to create the work. But how will get it to listeners? If most of the players out there will only play licensed formats?

      Imagine if today you were only able to disribute your work on 78RPM vinyl records? Who would take them?

      It's not at all clear that new devices will remain compatible with old formats, because any device that can play unlicenced works, can play pirated works (I can record the sound coming from the speaker, with some loss of quality).

      So, you can imagine a future where you are not even allowed to own a recording device (this happened in the past - you could not own a copy machine in the Soviet Union).

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    12. Re:Independent recording? by patiwat · · Score: 2

      > I own a small record label, how am I supposed to distribute my bands' music?

      It is the small record labels which have been most prolific in releasing works on SACD. Small labels like Chesky Records, Telarc, Groove Note, and ABKCO have been doing SACD releases at a rate that put the big labels to shame. If there were any arbitrary royalty fees, barriers to entry, required equipment (besides the mastering and playback equipment), do you think they would do this?

  14. haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Don't expect to be able to play or reproduce these on your computer anytime soon.

    HAHA haha HAHA

    Unless there won't be any SACD-ROMs (because, um, nobody gives a fuck about a new music format copying is inevitable. Idiot submitter.

    1. Re:haha by Unknown+Lamer · · Score: 2

      Not really...the discs have a physical watermark, so you could rip them with a sacd player (you can try to prevent ripping, but someone will always find away around it). The big thing is that you won't be able to burn SACDs because of the watermark. So, you'll be able to rip but not burn. Just get a portable ogg player whenever they get released (since vorbis supports an abitrary number of channels encoding those 5.1 streams should work, right?) or an mp3 player now. But then you'll lose the extra quality (mp3 can't use greater than 32-bits per sample, right? I have no idea). I really need to read more on what vorbis can do (it works for me now, so I don't have much of an urge to), but I bet it can (or will) be able to encode > 32-bits per sample (at least for input).

      --

      HAL 7000, fewer features than the HAL 9000, but just as homicidal!
    2. Re:haha by Latent+IT · · Score: 2

      Of course, SACD players play regular CD's... so uh... like Apple says, Rip, Mix, Burn.

      *shrug*

  15. Slashdot Loves Sony.... by tealover · · Score: 0, Troll

    Because they make DVD players and PS2s, so I'm sure no one here will be bothered by Sony's actions.

    Were Microsoft doing this type of underhanded business.....man, we wouldn't hear the end of it.

    I just despise the hypocrisy of

    a) the slashdot crew, who continue to lionize certain companies because of their products, while on the other hand they purport to be highly idealized young men who are fighting against the business practices, often led by these very same companies, which conspire to deprive all of us.

    and

    b) the slashdot readers who are often as bad as the slashdot crew.

    Guys, you can't attack Microsoft and then go shovel Sony equipment in your homes because they look nice. You either take a stand all the way or shut the hell up.

    --
    -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    1. Re:Slashdot Loves Sony.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Sony are as evil as microsoft. They seek to control as much as possible of formats and standards.

    2. Re:Slashdot Loves Sony.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should read the other comments before you post. Nobody is supporting Sony. Maybe you won't buy anything without a Sony label, but don't assume everyone else is the same.

    3. Re:Slashdot Loves Sony.... by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      > Because they make DVD players and PS2s, so I'm sure no one here will
      >be bothered by Sony's actions.
      >
      >
      Why should it bother us? You can *STILL* make a copy of the music from the damn thing and it lets you RIAA and Microsoft supporter to continue deluding yourself that here people give a shit about you.

    4. Re:Slashdot Loves Sony.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      holy agreeing batman! That is the reason i own a gamecube, and thats it! not that PS2 doesnt have kickass games, which it does, but i choose to support a real game company that actually has ETHICS (a rare word in today's buisness environment)

    5. Re:Slashdot Loves Sony.... by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Hey, you're forgetting that today is Thursday. Thursday is the day that we don't hate the RIAA and MPAA on Slashdot. So, it's the best day to post stories about Sony.

      I never could get the hang of Thursdays myself.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  16. WTF? Standards anyone? by Dr.Zong · · Score: 1

    What about the Orange Book standard for CD's. Are they stamping a "Compact Disc" logo on it? 'cause they sure as hell are compliant if that's the case. Maybe someone should let Philips know... they might be interested in Sony's misadventures.

    --

    Party?!? What kind of party is this? Where's the damn keg?
    Virtus Junxit Mors Non Separabit
  17. Don't worry! by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Funny
    Sony is just exercising their Freedom to Innovate(tm). Really! Just remember, whenever a technology company comes out with something new, even if it's actually subtracting value from technology you already have, and even if you don't really want it, it's innovation. And we all know that innovation is good.

    Stop fair use! Innovate!.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Don't worry! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they have the freedom to innovate

      we have the right to stop buying their crap.

      some other company will come along and see an oportunity.

    2. Re:Don't worry! by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "Sony is just exercising their Freedom to Innovate(tm)."

      Now you all know why I've said that Sony is more evil than MS. Nobody ever believes me. Sony is downright RUTHLESS. MS is just arrogant. It's kinda like comparing Khan and Dr. Evil.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:Don't worry! by jag164 · · Score: 2

      heh, just like mini disc and beta...technical good stuff at the time but so damn pro-pri-it-ary (can't spell, drinking again) for anyone outside the sony mentality to persue (can't spell, drinking again) the technology.

    4. Re:Don't worry! by sconeu · · Score: 4, Funny

      And how much of the /.'ers righteous indignation will remain when the PS3 comes out? I'll tell you...

      Sony is evil.... OOOH PS3!! SHINY!!!! MUST BUY!!!!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    5. Re:Don't worry! by FueledByRamen · · Score: 1

      Proprietary
      Stuff makes me want to vomit
      God damn Sony junk

      --
      Every cloud has a silver lining (except for the mushroom shaped ones, which have a lining of Iridium & Strontium 90)
    6. Re:Don't worry! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I've always refused to buy a Playstation/PS2 for this very reason.

      Sony are evil. I've been saying this for years, but most people are of the "yeah, but their hardware is soooo nice....".

      ie "oooh... Shiny!".

    7. Re:Don't worry! by NTSwerver · · Score: 2


      Agreed.

      I am willing to bet SACD was dreamt up not by some Sony drone saying:

      "OK, so how can we improve our technology and offer the public a better quality audio medium"

      ....but rather:

      "OK, so how can we make loads more money and at the same time attempt to put a stop to piracy. We can also increase the sampling rate and flog it off as 'New Technology'"

      I don't doubt that the quality of SACD is better than CD, but I do doubt that it is as noticable as comparing MP3 to CD for example.

      --
      -----------------------
      Moderator's essentials
  18. two-layer media by porky_pig_jr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Someone has tested the quality of CD layer on two-layer media, and noticed that it was noticeably worse than a single layer CD. Much higher error rate.

    My undestanding of SACD is that it does not have a watermark but rather some encoding scheme which prevents it from being decoded. This is DVD-A which has a watermark.

    Both formats may be marginally better than CD (there are mix opinions on this matter). Seems like that the properly mastered CD sounds just fine. Rolling Stones recordings certainly need new remastering, incidently I got rid of my CD Rolling Stones because coudln't stand the sound ('brittle highs'), but once again, that was not a CD limitation per se, but very bad mastering. Even so, I'm not going to jump into the SACD bandwagon because both SACD and DVD-A are mostly a gimmick and its real purpose is to introduce a built-in copy protection you can't defeat.

    1. Re:two-layer media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People will get around SACD copy protection by mod-chipping the players.

    2. Re:two-layer media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sony calls their main scheme "digital watermarking". It ties the decryption of the disc to a "signature" that is specific to the physical characteristics of the plant that pressed the disc. IF the disc both validates and decodes properly, the final digital audio stream is supposed to be unaffected by the watermark.

      A SACD may also have one of the SDMI / DVD-Audio style audible watermarks, though I have seen claims that the early SACDs don't.

    3. Re:two-layer media by FFFish · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, and that's it in a nutshell, isn't it? Good masters are few and far between. And I'm not talking dom-/sub- sex relationships here!

      Most of the crap that's pumped out of the music industry is recorded like the shite it is, mixed and mastered with the care it truly deserves (ie. none), and pressed onto cheap-ass CDs with aluminum so thin that it has peephole throughout.

      SACD is just a complete waste of potential quality on crap like that. There's absolutely no reason to press Britnay Bimbo Spears to the SACD format. It will make no quality difference whatsoever. It's like feeding a fine filet mignon to pigs.

      The only reason to use SACD for such crap is the anti-piracy measures. Which, as we all know, will probably be enough to thwart your average teeniebopper. Won't do S.F.A. against the big-time, big-money pirates in Asia, LA, NY, etc.: they'll simply grab pure digital audio direct of the bus of some hacked-up player, and rip that to press.

      My only question is this: why are the media conglomerates so focused on the little fish, and ignoring the big fish? What are they gaining by inconvienencing Joe Noone?

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    4. Re:two-layer media by tlh1005 · · Score: 1

      You are correct about the number of EXCELLENT masters being minute (probably about 2 to be exact) but I think there are plenty who can get the job done. Understandably so, the music industry oftens waits on the more excellent to take care of the mastering for SACD media, another reason we don't have a huge amount of it available.

      Its just not fair to say that the others are not getting the production right however... in terms of your ears and mine that sort of music just isn't good and there is not an audio engineer out there whose gonna help that opinion.

      I personally wouldn't care to buy Britney Spears on SACD but I know somoene else would. The new multi-channel formats will not survive catering to audio-enthusist like you and me. I can appreciate the warmness of an orchestra through SACD but Beehtoven is not where the market sits.

  19. Copying SACD hybrid discs by RangerSpeedBumpp · · Score: 1

    I don't see what the problem is - this is a hybrid format playable just like regular discs. The disc just contains a second layer with higher-resolution audio. As an audiophile I think this is a good thing, especially since you'll still be able to rip your low-quality mp3 files from low-quality CD.

    1. Re:Copying SACD hybrid discs by MrOutlander · · Score: 1

      The problem is, Sony are trying to totally control the format that we have for audio. Standards and formats should not be controlled by a single corporation that will change/alter the format specs in order to gain more profits for themselves rather than to make a format better for the people. We need to steer clear of these corporations and whatever they create if it in any way takes control out of the peoples' hands.

      Standards should be entirely open and free, and not decided by meglomaniacal corporations.

      --
      http://168.143.119.183/~MrOutlander/
    2. Re:Copying SACD hybrid discs by beni1207 · · Score: 1

      most SACDs are not hybrid discs, though - you have to keep that in mind.

    3. Re:Copying SACD hybrid discs by head-fi · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if this is true. Most of the SACDs I own are 2-channel and multi-channel hybrids.

    4. Re:Copying SACD hybrid discs by beni1207 · · Score: 1

      afaik all SACDs that have multi-channel info also have a 2-channel layer. I was talking about the SACD/CD hybrid discs, i.e. most SACD discs do not have a regular CD layer that will play in a normal CD player.

    5. Re:Copying SACD hybrid discs by chefren · · Score: 1

      This has changed, since it is no longer more expensive to make a hybrid disc that a plain SACD disc. Thus most new SACD-discs are hybrid.

  20. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -1 Retard

    The Stones rule!

  21. scratches? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so what happens when a scratch somehow obscures the watermark? on a regular cd you'd end up having a song or two skip/not play....on these I'm assuming it won't even read the disk

    1. Re:scratches? by NeMon'ess · · Score: 1

      watermarks are not encryption, where a messed up byte can screw everything. if one watermark gets messed up there will undoubtedly be others still intact. Hell, the watermark could even be an image when the data is manipulated correctly. If the image on the SACD is close enough to what it should be, it passes and the disk plays.

    2. Re:scratches? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks much for the info

  22. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Hollins · · Score: 3, Informative

    Phillips collaborated with Sony on this. They share the licensing rights.

    They will stamp both CD and SACD on the Rolling Stones CDs, since they play on both types of players. IF the format catches on, expect future releases to work on on SACD.

  23. Vote with your wallet by horse · · Score: 1

    If you don't like this (I don't), there is a simple recourse: stop buying their music.

    There are enough old CDs and other sources of music to last me a long time...

    1. Re:Vote with your wallet by timeOday · · Score: 1

      The response to the low sales will be louder complaining about the dog that ate the music industry's homework - Internet piracy - along with more inflated "damages" and more lobbying for regulation of all information devices.

    2. Re:Vote with your wallet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am voting with my wallet. I pre-order 16 of the re-mastered Rolling Stones CDs.

    3. Re:Vote with your wallet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm voting with MY wallet, I'm buying SACD's. I love the better sound quality and don't mind at all that I can't steal a copy.

    4. Re:Vote with your wallet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly -- they don't know that they're losing sales specifically due to their stupidity.

      I'm putting together a "boycott" site that would let people sign a petition and indicate how many sales they're willing to postpone or cancel in response. I'm hoping a lot of folks will go for 6 months, thus cutting into the "Christmas profit" season.

      Comments? I can't say when the site will be operational, but surely I'll make the information known here.

      -M

    5. Re:Vote with your wallet by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Doesn't it bother you that you can't make a backup, and that if/when the disk wears out or gets damaged you have to buy it again? Or even that Sony is going to use the money they made from you to buy legislators to enact crap like CBDTPA?

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  24. Mod Chip by HimalayanRoadblock · · Score: 1

    Mod chip for the player. I know pre-modded DVD players are quite a good selling product. 1st gen will probably be solder, but 2nd and 3rd will be plug and play or flash rom upload.

    1. Re:Mod Chip by HimalayanRoadblock · · Score: 1

      And since DVD-R drives are like 300$ now, I'm sure somebody could(read:WILL) find a way to copy the discs, albeit requiring a computer. But that's both ends of Sony's new security program, and I'm not even getting paid for this.

  25. SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by edrugtrader · · Score: 5, Funny

    this point has been brought up 20,000 times so i'll try not to rant too much... if you can play it, and listen to it, you can record it.

    sure you can't go digital to digital, but a couple good 24/96 digital to analog converters will make your copy sound nearly exact (if not completely exact)... if *1* person has the technology to copy the sound professionally (with no loss) into a digital medium, then everyone might as well have it, because the second that 1 person distributes the file, it is out there for everyone. (this includes they guy that works at the cd press shop and has access to the masters)

    YOU CAN'T COPY-PROTECT MUSIC.

    YOU CAN'T COPY-PROTECT VIDEO.

    YOU CAN'T COPY-PROTECT CowboyNeal

    --
    MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    1. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know they can't COPY-PROTECT CowboyNeal. Weird things are going on these days! Watch out!

    2. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by renard · · Score: 3, Interesting
      if you can play it, and listen to it, you can record it

      Ah yes... but if your SACD player doesn't play anything but original SACD's (no SACD-R), then you won't be able to play your copy as an SACD. Sure, you'll be able to burn it to CD... but you won't want that "harsh" CD sound any more, you will be hooked on SACD.

      I'm not saying it will work, but that's the plan.

      -Renard

    3. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      If I record it using 24/96 AD converters, I wouldn't want to degrade it by converting to CD audio in the first place. It's just another good use for the huge recordable media that recordable DVD gives us.

      I think a high resolution converson like this, and the finally available large writable media is going to make it worthwhile to start digitizing vinyl. CD degrades the vinyl recording.

    4. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by klez23 · · Score: 1
      if your SACD player doesn't play anything but original SACD's (no SACD-R), then you won't be able to play your copy as an SACD

      but your computer surely will be able to. SACD's quality is analogous to 24/96 PCM. even now you can get a soundcard capable of 24/96 playback for about $200, cheaper than a SACD player. & of course this will come down.

    5. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All of this is moot if we can't find a way to protect P2P tho...we should consider that a #1 priority in protecting our rights.

    6. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

      CD degrades the vinyl recording.
      If you know what you're doing it doesn't have to.

      But doing it right is much more complicated than just sampling a filtered signal. Some professional A2D converters do it right, but not all.

      Basically you have to sample at DVD audio quality and use algorithms to reduce the bandwidth and dither down the bit depth much more carefully than any analog circuit can do it.

      As an aside I played with dithering sound a few months ago - if you use an error dispersion sort of dither you can easily hear a signal many decibles below the noise floor (my test signal was a song who's loudest point was 24 db below it).

      A more common sort of dither gives you 2 to 3 more bits more or less.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

    7. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --SCD degrades the vinyl recording

      So does PLAYING it.

    8. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by A+Life+in+Hell · · Score: 1

      but yet, mp3 is lossy, and doesn't sound exactly like the CD, but people love it. People don't give a flying fuck about quality beyond a certain level

      --
      Commodore 64, Loading up the dance floor!
    9. Re:SONY, LAWMAKERS: THINK!!! by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      That depends.

      There are high end turntables that use an optical stylus. Nothing physically touches the vinyl.

  26. The key issue is labelling and freedom to choose by anomalousman · · Score: 1

    Whether or not some company adds "feature X" to a CD player is not a problem, even if we don't want that feature. There will always be a market for the uncrippled players, so the uncrippled formats will survive.

    As someone posted, if you can hear the music, you can copy the music anyway, so it's not even as if the distribution format of desirable content can control the market heavily.

    The only possible problems here are legislation-enforced freedom from choice, or else the sneaky proliferation of devices with these cripple features. What is essential is enforced labeling of the affected drives so that we know what we're buying.

  27. Re:Two things by Hilleh · · Score: 1

    Rolling Stones suck, eh? Do you honestly think people will be listening to Linkin Park in 25 years? Or the latest "fresh beats" by Generic Rapper? Face it dude, the classics are forever. *Goes back to broadcasting Zeppelin on his shoutcast station while ripping his friend's new Pink Floyd CD* Sony must love me :).

  28. SACD, mp3, and more by cheinonen · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First, if you're mad because you can't rip your SACD to an mp3 to listen to, then you're totally missing the point. Go buy a CD for that, it'll rip just fine, you can listen to it on your iPod, and everyone is happy. The point of buying something on SACD is to have far better sound quality, not to compress it down. SACD's secondary layer uses a DVD to hold the information, so that's 4.7 gigs of audio for the same amount of tracks.


    The idea of buying something to listen to on your iPod, or in your car, or on your computer that is SACD makes no sense. You're going to have hardware that is holding you back far more than the qualify of the medium. Unless you're listening on a computer with a really nice DAC and some Grado RS1 headphones, you can probably stick to CD audio or mp3's and notice not much difference. However, if you are listening on a real stereo with decent speakers, then listening to a well made SACD compared to a CD will blow you away.


    If I want to make a backup copy of my music, I can buy a copy on CD since I'm not going to be able to make a copy of a SACD myself anytime soon. To me, the compromise of incredibly high quality sound, that does beat the high end vinyl I've listened to, and having copy protection that doesn't interfere with that sound quality is a tradeoff I'm alright with. If you're mad over not being able to rip them for mp3's, then you should just buy the CD.

    1. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Tyrall · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I believe you're missing the point.

      If I want to make a backup copy of my music, I can buy a copy on CD since I'm not going to be able to make a copy of a SACD myself anytime soon.
      SACDs supposedly play in regular CD players as a regular CD, and are only 'fully featured' in SACD players.
      How long will it be I wonder before you can't buy a 'regular' CD?
      If the only way to purchase a digital copy (can you even buy cassettes any more?) of an artist's work is on SACD, and to most consumers it's the same difference, I would venture not long.

    2. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Amoeba · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You said:

      If I want to make a backup copy of my music, I can buy a copy on CD since I'm not going to be able to make a copy of a SACD myself anytime soon.

      Ya know, I though that same thing too.... initially. See, the problem is what happens when the day arrives that the only format available in drives and media is SACD? Can't make archival exact copies of your own media. Can't get a replacement for the disc if gets scratched. So much for Fair Use.

      And that's my problem with it. Call me kooky but I'm wary of companies that try the "Oooh.. look over there, SHINY!" distraction tactic while they take away my money/rights/stuff. Sony has lots of practice in that particular area.

      Amoeba

      --
      Do not taunt Happy-Fun Ball
    3. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by EllisDees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >However, if you are listening on a real stereo with decent speakers, then listening to a well made SACD compared to a CD will blow you away.

      Are you sure about that? Until I see a few double blind ABX tests comparing a SACD with a CD mastered from the same source, I'm going to have to consider it all marketing. "Ooh! This format can store *four times* more sound than the human ear can discern, where a CD can just produce a little more than anyone can possibly hear!"

      Bleah.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    4. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by alienw · · Score: 1

      Well, you don't have to wait for the tests. Everyone with any knowledge of audio will agree that CDs are a poor format. Crappy error-correction, only 16-bit precision (20 is optimal), and a relatively low sampling rate are all problems. Guess why audiophiles mostly listen to vinyl. Of course, the 2.8 MHz sampling rate is ridiculous (24bit/96KHz is more than enough for almost anything), but you have to fill the disc somehow...

      On the other hand, I doubt that many consumers will be able to tell the difference between CDs and SACDs. You really need good equipment for that. I mean good audiophile-type equipment, not Sony surround-sound crap (rule of thumb: if it's surround sound or has more than 2 LEDs, it's not audiophile equipment and it doesn't produce good sound). I highly doubt they'll pay $250+ to replace their existing CD players, and I also doubt that people will buy CDs that are incompatible with their portable players, existing players, boomboxes, car players, etc. Regular CDs are more than satisfactory for that. And as long as we have hybrid CDs (forever, most likely - people won't upgrade and won't buy SACD-only discs) we won't have problems copying them.

    5. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by crystalplague · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I understand your point but my best sound system, the only one that you could actually hear the 4.7 gig difference, is on my computer. If I can't play it on my DVD-ROM, it's not worth me buying it.

    6. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by elmegil · · Score: 2
      I think what's interesting is that, while you may not be able to copy the SACD data, if it plays as a regular CD in a regular CD player, then what the hell stops me from ripping it? As the others pointed out, ooh, so I can't rip the 4.7G data stream. I would be really surprised if I can't rip the regular CD audio.....

      The other thing is, the SACD player won't play non-watermarked CDs? So if I want to play music by my friend Dave, I can't? To hell with that. Why would I buy such a restrictive player, when everything else on the market says "plays CDR & MP3!"

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    7. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Try as I can, I just can't put together a stereo system where the point of weakness is the CD.

      In the end, it always ends up being the damn room you're in: it has natural resonances and echoes that mean that everything you play becomes a disgusting muddle. If you don't believe this, get a DAT recorder and stick it in front of your face at what you consider the "sweet spot" in your room and record something.

      Then, play it back. Be disgusted at how your $5000 stereo system sounds like a $30 boombox according to your DATs cold opinion.

      CDs ARE NOT THE WEAK POINT IN YOUR SOUND SYSTEM!

    8. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by handle · · Score: 1

      First, if you're mad because you can't rip your SACD to an mp3 to listen to, then you're totally missing the point. Go buy a CD for that, it'll rip just fine, you can listen to it on your iPod, and everyone is happy.

      What if I want to listen to a high-quality recording in my home *and* have a mp3 copy on my laptop?

    9. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by beni1207 · · Score: 1

      The 2.8Mhz sampling rate isn't as ridiculous as it seems - SACD isn't a PCM format like CD and DVD-A...it's a one-bit stream, so the extra-high sampling rate really is necessary. And it really does sound good. Really, really good.

    10. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      >if it plays as a regular CD in a regular CD
      >player, then what the hell stops me from ripping
      >it?

      Surprise!! Don't you think they'll deliberately make the CD part sound crappy?

    11. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by HowIsMyDriving? · · Score: 5, Informative

      I have an SACD player and I can play all the burned CD copies that I want. The only thing that you can't do rip the 4.7g data stream. You CAN RIP A SACD HYBRID DISK TO MP3. It will play in any regular cd player. This includes cd drives.

      --
      Welcome to the Entropy Bar, may I take your order?
    12. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by elmegil · · Score: 1
      Don't you think they'll deliberately make the CD part sound crappy?

      Um. No. At least not any crappier than any sound today.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    13. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by BeBoxer · · Score: 2

      And what if I want the SACD quality at home, but want to be able to make MP3's for my portable player? Oh yeah, just buy TWO copies of the music. Please explain to me how that's not just bending the consumer over?

    14. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, but if it becomes the 'only' format, then there will surely be SACD drives for PC's.

      Now, maybe you cant take and copy one to another SACD, but as long as you can read the audio to play it, you can still record an MP3 (or even a 44khz stream)..

      The only thing they prevent is making another SACD (well, they dont prevent it, but the copy wouldnt be usable).

      I think they *might* even fianlly have it right - the only people this will stop are the real mass-production piracy houses, unless they are able to forge the watermarks.

    15. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, I have to pay $19.99 for an SACD, and then you want me to pay another $15.00 for a lower quality audio CD just so I can rip it for my portable devices? ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR FUCKING MIND? Or are you a content producer (read: greedy crook)?

    16. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Mr.Spaz · · Score: 1

      (rule of thumb: if it's surround sound or has more than 2 LEDs, it's not audiophile equipment and it doesn't produce good sound).

      Crap. That $150,000 mixing board in the other room must be complete junk. There's LEDs all over it!

    17. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea of buying something to listen to on your iPod, or in your car, or on your computer that is SACD makes no sense.


      Why wouldn't you want to buy the highest-quality recording (if it were copy-perversion-free)?

      So the car tape deck, or 256Kbps MP3s on an iPod, might not reproduce all of the sound quality. At least when you listen to it on a real stereo, the full quality will be there.

      Better than buying a grungy old cassette that may subjectively sound worse on your best equipment!
    18. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2


      See, the problem is what happens when the day arrives that the only format available in drives and media is SACD? Can't make archival exact copies of your own media. Can't get a replacement for the disc if gets scratched. So much for Fair Use.


      What you're going to do is turn to illicit data channels. The digital black market. You're going to buy counterfeit CDs from street corners. You're going to download copies from usenet, P2P apps, or off-shore music repositories / services.

      And since this is illegal, its going to take a bit of an investment in time and possibly money to do it (although it won't be too difficult to do - and a lot of your friends will be doing it and sharing tips on the best sources). And once you've made that investment... you're going to begin to feel rather reluctant to put MORE time and money in to legitimate copies.
    19. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by FatRatBastard · · Score: 4, Informative

      Its not bending the consumer over because its DUAL LAYERED. i.e. an average everyday CD player sees it as an average everyday CD. Rip away!

      What you can't rip is the enhanced audio stream (on the DVD layer), but as someone else pointed out earlier you really wouldn't want to anyway if all you're doing is compressing down to mp3.

    20. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by evilrunner · · Score: 1

      I think that to an extent that you are also missing the point. It all boils down to this; If I go out and buy my entire collection of music on this new medium and get rid of my normal CDs, how in the hell am I able to use them in the same way as I used my old CDs? It's like saying that if I bought CD's to replace cassetts, the quality of the music on the CD is too good to reduce down to a lossy MP3 file. I have to agree with trying to reduce the number of music pirates out there but not at the cost of our free use and at the costs of my rights as a consumer. I for one will not go out and buy any Sony audio equipment and will avoid their music label at all costs.

      --
      "I've figured out what's wrong with life: It's other people." -Dilbert
    21. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 2

      great, so people who buy the super audio cd's will be forced to buy ANOTHER copy just to be able to rip it to mp3 and play it on their other devices?

      Sounds like a ripoff to me! having to buy 2 copies of the same disc.

      --
      GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
    22. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by torndorff · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I don't see how this is going to make me want to put more money into buying the actual album.

      I do NOT think people should simply download music; just wanted to put that out of the way.

      The example you gave was horrid. "Your friends are doing it, other people are doing it, you are finding the better sources for it, theres ~5 different ways to get it... so you ARENT GOING TO DO IT." That simply doesnt make sense. By that point I would simply buy the more simple (as in 2 channel, CD quality audio) version and be done with it. It's the same everywhere, be it mp3 player, stereo, or computer. I don't have to ask questions and I don't have a lower quality on my other form of playback.

      I love life. RIAA/MPAA creates confusion.

    23. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If some piracy houses forge *holograms*, I don't think it will be hard to find hardware that can duplicate the watermark.

    24. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by kubrick · · Score: 2

      See, the problem is what happens when the day arrives that the only format available in drives and media is SACD? Can't make archival exact copies of your own media. Can't get a replacement for the disc if gets scratched. So much for Fair Use.

      Maybe people will stop buying drives and discs in this format? Market demand will inspire people previously unconnected with the music industry to produce and sell a new audio format, maybe not quite as good technically as SACD, but at least it will be open, and new bands and artists unconnected to companies like Sony will become popular as their work is more easily available.

      An optimistic view, I know, but it could be possible. Sure, after 20 or 30 years something similar will happen with the new companies... anyway it would be worth it to see Britney et. al. wither on the vine.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    25. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 3, Interesting


      I'm sorry, but I don't see how this is going to make me want to put more money into buying the actual album.


      I don't think you caught on to what I'm saying.

      The point that was made is what happens if SACD becomes the only format available. What if you still care about your fair use rights?

      My point is that people will turn to illegal copies. And once they begin to do that on a regular basis - once the illegal copy is providing them something they want that the legitimate product can not... those same people will no longer bother buying a legitimate copy.

      The difference between that possible future and today is that todays media, the CD, is still a (more or less) fully capable product. It still tends to be of greater quality with the added bonus of a nice printed CD, cover, lyrics, artwork, etc. And again - if I buy a legitimate CD, I can still use it to make a copy for the car or burn MP3s for my home jukebox or portible player.
    26. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by tigga · · Score: 1
      Not all of SACDs dual-layered, or hybrid.
      Sony-made SACDs are mostly one-layered.


      Anyway it's not customer-bending - they just don't care ;)

    27. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 2

      My main gripe about SACD is that DVD-audio does the job as well. Sure, SACD stores even more information, but I doubt a blind test would prove it vastly superior to DVD audio (Dolby Digital).

      There are certain record labels that produce high quality records on dvd. You can also get a CD version, and compare.

      --

      Stop the brainwash

    28. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by amokk · · Score: 1

      I have to point out that the difference would be immediately obvious.

      CD Audio supports 2 channels with 16 bits per channel at 44.1 khz.

      SACD supports 5.1 channels (IIRC) with 24 bits per channel at 96 khz.

      The fact that there are more supported channels will immediately impact the sound quality and can make for some "trippy" effects.

      Of course, you have to have a stereo that can take advantage of this. I'm not talking about an "audiophile" rig, but rather something that supports 5.1 channels in order to take advantage of it.

      Don't expect to hear a difference between CD and SACD on a pair of headphones, no matter how good they are.

      --
      I think, therefore I am an Atheist.
    29. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      I understand your point but my best sound system, the only one that you could actually hear the 4.7 gig difference, is on my computer.

      I doubt that. I'm no golden-ear, but my audio-bore mates all rant on about how they need 3 ft of lead around their amp if theres a computer on in the house to get a decent sound out of it. So quite apart from the fact your average 'sound souped' PC has a shitty amp in the first place, the noise (electrical, not fan hum) from your machine will fuck up the sound anyway.

    30. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by (trb001) · · Score: 2

      I guarantee eBay still has 5.25" disk drives for sale...I would almost guarantee you could still find an 8" drive around here. Media might be a little harder, but there's somebody out there with a warehouse full of those disks.

      My point is, don't worry about not being able to find media/drives. They're still around, you just won't be able to stroll out to CompUSA and pick yourself up one. And like another poster said, you really can't copy protect audio/video...SOMETHING has to decode it, and from the decoder you just reencode it any way you want. Same quality? Probably not, but near perfect and certainly close enough for casual listening.

      --trb

    31. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by pmz · · Score: 2

      Until I see a few double blind ABX tests comparing a SACD with a CD mastered from the same source, I'm going to have to consider it all marketing. "Ooh! This format can store *four times* more sound than the human ear can discern, where a CD can just produce a little more than anyone can possibly hear!"

      This is a pretty accurate interpretation. Of all the CDs I own, I hear the limitations of the recording studio, mastering process, and my stereo equipment long before I hear the limitations of the CD media. Quite honestly, I think even the CD format is underutilized, because the recording process itself is flawed (just how accurate can a recording of a symphony in a concert hall be?).

      The only real motivations behind a "better" format would be to market to ego-blinded audiophiles and to finally have a copy-proof means of distribution. Which one seems the more likely motive?

      If music was reasonably priced, even I wouldn't mind purchasing a new (SA)CD to replace a broken or stolen one. $5 here or there isn't enough money to cry over. $20, on the other hand, is still enough for a nice dinner for two or a heap of used books.

      The problem with any popularity of a copy-protected format is that the music cartels can artificially create scarcity in the market (recent articles about DeBeers come to mind). Thus, it is highly unlikely that music would ever be reasonably priced, and even normal market forces might not be able to fix this. Possible RIAA quote: "You want music? It $30 or you ain't getting any."

      I really don't understand the legal system very well. Could anti-trust action be taken against such a system?

    32. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by mrogers · · Score: 1
      My point is, don't worry about not being able to find media/drives. They're still around, you just won't be able to stroll out to CompUSA and pick yourself up one.

      And when it's illegal to buy or sell them because of the CBDTPA, you won't be able to find them on eBay either. If you want a DRM-free CD player you'll have to speak to that guy in the corner with the facial tic who always keeps his sleeves rolled down over his knuckles...

    33. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      yeah, my 31-band EQ has 3 LEDs, so I guess it's just over the limit.

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    34. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "just how accurate can a recording of a symphony in a concert hall be?"
      Where would you record a symphony then? In a parking lot?

    35. Re:SACD, mp3, and more by pmz · · Score: 2

      Where would you record a symphony then? In a parking lot?

      No. I was just trying to point out that recording is very complex, and even a concert hall introduces a lot of variables into how things sound. I doubt that any two points in space within a concert hall actually get the same sound, and background noise can be significant (a few classical recordings have the conductors movements audible or have slight echos due to the room, for example). This is probably true of any live performance, so my argument is that the act of recording can introduce more error than the CD format itself.

  29. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by flonker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You missed a word. IF the format catches on, expect future releases to work on an SACD ONLY.

  30. This is the same as with DVD by malraid · · Score: 1

    Sony is bringing up a new (and improved) technology. They HAVE the right to protect their IP. If the technology is good, as with DVD, it will catch on. Of course someone will come out with a way around to copy protection just as with DVD's region code. I believe that this is the true right to innovate.

    --
    please excuse my apathy
    1. Re:This is the same as with DVD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right to innovate

      thats someone's IP, you didn't come up with it, COPYRIGHT VIOLATION!

      AND even if you did come up with it, you're using english, and i copywrited that 74 years ago, so even still COPYRIGHT VIOLATION! you've got another year till you can speak english

    2. Re:This is the same as with DVD by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      If the technology is good, as with DVD

      HAHAHAHAHAHA

      I hope you meant your comment to be facetious. DVD is no where near as good as it could have been if they weren't so busy trying to preserve their buggy-whip business models.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  31. I say well done. by The_Guv'na · · Score: 1

    Better quality and preventing piracy [though perhaps also some "fair use"].

    There's really not much to complain about here as things stand, although what about royalties? Can people trust Sony not to screw people with fees for distribution by SACD?

    Ali

  32. It won't take too long... by tuxlove · · Score: 1

    before people come up with ways to make digital copies of SACDs. When that happens, I'll buy them. Until then, they can suck dust. I do not play music from physical media any more. When I buy a disc, I copy it to my file server and store it away in the basement in a crate full of all my other previously-ripped CDs.

  33. mp3 players by DavidLeblond · · Score: 1

    I guess I spent $150 on an MP3 player for nothing. Damn.

    $10 says SACDs will cost even MORE too.

  34. Not that bad... by Hex4def6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure its another CD format, but the bait that they plan on using to lure conumers is the improvements that SACD has over the traditional format, such as 5.1 souround sound. That is pretty cool, admit it :).

    1. Re:Not that bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i havent listened to 5.1 audio (music at lease), but it seems that music is music, and unless it needs position (ie movies) i dont see a purpose

  35. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I admire your stubbornness, and dedication to the boycott. But remember. If you can hear it, you can copy it. There isn't anything RIAA can do to really stop people from ripping the songs. True it's a bit harder to copy it into a MP3 from a CD but you can. Once it's done in MP3, that's all they wrote. They lost.

  36. Sigh... by I+Love+this+Company! · · Score: 1

    I don't know why the record companies bother anymore. Sure, it may stop the casual copier, but the protection *WILL* be cracked by someone determined enough, for better or for worse. If it comes down to it a line-in to a sound card is sufficient.

    Nothing new.

    --

    "All art is quite useless." -- Oscar Wilde
    1. Re:Sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the casual copier is who theyre trying to stop. they *know* they can't stop people with inteligence from copying their discs but most people don't read /. =P

  37. Sounds great... by aralin · · Score: 2

    Hey, the format sounds great. Could you guys wait a little before it will be widespread to publish the crack to decrypt the music in DVD players? I would really love CDs to get distributed with 5.1 surround. Its was about time to get good 2.8Mhz bitrate too :)
    Basicly, don't tell these guys too soon or you ruin it all...

    --
    If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
  38. haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is awesome! but I think dvd-audio is much better........ DVD AUDIO RULES!~

  39. Riiiight by machine+of+god · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The sound still has to come out of it though. This still won't stop me from putting an audio jack from my discman to my computer, and then ripping it from there. Nor will it stop anyone else, which means I will still be able to download whatever they have locked up so tightly. It's moot and stupid.

    From the department of redundancy department.

  40. No real problem by ColaMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Give it a few years, some manufacturer in china will release a combo DVD/DIVX/WMA/OGG/SACD/CD player with digital out.

    Oops! Another brilliant copy protection scheme bypassed.

    --

    You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
    There is a lot of hype here.
    1. Re:No real problem by Mr.Spaz · · Score: 1

      When I was in Hong Kong about a year ago, I remember seeing a DVD/MP3 disc/CD/VCD player that looked like a portable CD player (with the exception of an additional output for video, and a slight increase in thickness). The store made a point of putting a little sign on it that let you know it was region-free, too. In light of that experience, I can definitely see something like this happening. Just log on and order one on the web. Of course, then the RIAA will probably try to sue to have 'net access to all of Asia blocked from the US.

  41. confusion... by z01d · · Score: 0, Redundant

    is there anyone can explain to me how come the Music Industry think they can prevent CD copy? i always think i can play it thru speaker, then record it as any format i like, or be more professional, rent a recording studio...

  42. Grado?! Get Sennheiser! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This is what you need, the Sennheiser Orpheus electrostatic headphones!

    What a deal, at only $14,900 US!

    Put me down for 3!

    1. Re:Grado?! Get Sennheiser! by TheHouseMouse · · Score: 1

      For like $13,000 less, you can get a near equal set of Stax w/ Amp. Whoa, I just checked the price on the Sennheiser HD 600's (Senn's highest end, non electrostatic), and they're $350. That's crazy, I've seen them sell for double. The Grado's are still a AMAZING product though. From the $70 SR60, to the $700 RS1, they deliever a high quality product all the way. And nothing can compete to the value of the SR60's. If your interested in a good pair of midpriced headphones, check out the Grado SR-60 or SR-80 models. For more info, check out www.headwize.com , however their site is acting a little bit weird connection wise.

      --
      Only the meek get pinched. The bold survive.
    2. Re:Grado?! Get Sennheiser! by SuperDuperMan · · Score: 1

      I have two pair of the HD 600's (one at work and one at home). You can find then for less than $250 a pair if you look.

      The price of these headphones in Europe is far cheaper than they are here in the US.

    3. Re:Grado?! Get Sennheiser! by TheHouseMouse · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info, I might need to do some searching around. My Grado SR225's are getting a little bit beat-up.

      --
      Only the meek get pinched. The bold survive.
  43. There is a diagram of by eclectro · · Score: 5, Informative



    how it works here

    --
    Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    1. Re:There is a diagram of by Ig0r · · Score: 0, Troll

      Here's a better diagram about what SACD will mean to consumers.

      --
      Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
  44. Well by sulli · · Score: 1

    Once the Red Book patents expire, we will have an "open" standard. Don't forget that at the moment the CD is controlled by Sony and Philips.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  45. Re:The poster seems to have forgotten... by sam31415 · · Score: 1

    ...the `Digital' in the DMCA. Yes, there is an analog hole; no, the DMCA doesn't stop you from using it. I do agree that the labels seem to have forgotten about this for now, but given the current apparent stranglehold on Congress, can the AMCA be far behind?

  46. pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SACD-rom would be pointless. DVD-rom hasn't even caught on yet, so why would they need a SACD-ROM, well i guess they could waste money....

    1. Re:pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a dvdrom. It cost me about $100 Canadian. a DVD player at the time went for about $150.

  47. forest and trees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the problem is that, yes these are hybrid discs now, in an effort to switch the market to the SACD format upon which they can slowly phase out the lower quality cd layer and viola. watermarking and indefeatable copy protection. so no one will be able to make any copies (aside from the analog hole), and fair use goes to hell. so are you just ignorant of the glaring problem, or myopic to the extent that 'as an audiophile' is really just a euphimism for 'i am a flaming asshole with no regard for the rights of anyone but myself'?

  48. alterior motive.. by Whammy666 · · Score: 1
    Besides the obvious DRM crapola, there may be another motivation to this sudden 'need' for a new CD standard, in that the patents for the original CD format are nearing expiration. Presumably once the patents expire, then Sony will no longer be able to collect royalties on every CD sold.

    Even if this new format is the greatest thing since sliced bread, I still won't touch it given the greed of the RIAA, etc.. Besides, better music at much better prices are available at the used record shops which is where I get my 'new' music now. So fuck Sony. Send SACD the way of the Betamax and the 8-track.

    Dubya \duhb'-yah\ n 1: A dim-witted individual. (syn. 'moron', 'dullard') 2: A leader who attacks freedom and liberty while pretencing to defend the same. (compare with hypocrite, tyrant) 3: An individual who is a pawn to lobbying interests. (syn. 'lacky', 'sell-out', 'spineless sock puppet') <George ~ Bush>

    --
    When all else fails, run.
    1. Re:alterior motive.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And know what happened when the patent for R-12 (Freon) expired - they made it illegal, so now we have to use that R-134A crap - patented by the same company!
      (For those who don't know, R-12 and R-134A are refrigerants used in automotive air conditioners)

  49. Sure they do.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as long as they keep cranking out that lame assed anime they like to pull pud at so much.

    Corporations are evil and greed-Ooooo SHINEY!

  50. Re:Two things by moonbender · · Score: 2

    So what. There's a good chance people won't be listening to the Stones in 350 years - does that mean the Stones are inherently inferior to Bach? Not that I like Linkin Park or Mr. Generic Rapper. :)

    --
    Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
  51. Worse than hypocrisy... by Wee · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...are people who not only get on their soapbox before knowing what they're talking about, but also tell us what the view is like from up there.

    People here (and elsewhere) attack Microsoft for very good reasons: Microsoft is evil incorporate and puts its own interests far ahead of its users' needs (whether it be privacy, security, stability, etc) in a very heavy-handed and public way which makes for easy bashing. Many people also tend to be unfairly nasty towards them. Microsoft BOB, for example, got a very unjustified bad rap, as did the paper clip in Office and the jumping "search dog" in XP.

    Is Sony any better or worse than MS? I don't know; I don't own any Sony stuff and I don't keep up on their practices. The new CD format thing sure does seem to suck, though, and judging from the ~50 comments I've read many people here agree it's a bad idea. They also appear to think that Sony aims to prevent fair use by adopting it. That sentiment would seem to be in opposition to your assessment of the Slashdot readers. So why all the harsh words?

    You've come to the wrong place for unbiased opinions. You'd do better to complain about the weather.

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

    1. Re:Worse than hypocrisy... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      they're worse. ms doesn't make cpu's and put together computers. sony makes records, sells them, and then sells stuff to play them(ironically, even to copy them). what they want is to be able to push 'standards' they own(like the memstick) to people and then get the rest of their money too.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  52. i would have bought it by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    The fact that SACDs will have better audio quality is the worst. They are just baiting people in, and the thing is, i would have bought these if they had no copy-protection, and were sold at reasonable price. Now i wont

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  53. "Often compared to vinyl" by dpbsmith · · Score: 5, Funny

    The FAQ says that "the sound of SACD [tick] is often compared to that [tick] of vinyl."

    But just wait until next year, when they unleash UACD (Ultra Audio CD). The rich [tick] emotional [tick] impact of [tick] THIS format [tick] is often [tick] compared to [tick] a 78-RPM [tick] shellac pressing [tick] shellac pressing [tick] shellac pressing [tick] shellac pressing [tick] shellac pressing.

    However, even the 78 is subject to electronic processes which distort the sound.

    The best process of all would be one in which the actual soundwaves create the recording through direct action, without the intermediary of any transducers of electronics whatsoever.

    So I wouldn't buy UACD.

    No sir, I'm wait for the MACD (Mega Audio CD) that's waiting in the wings, with sound that's often compared to an acoustically recorded Edison Amberol cylinder.

    1. Re:"Often compared to vinyl" by The_dev0 · · Score: 1

      I wonder how much it costs them to license format names from Capcom? Next year it will be: Super-hyper-mega-ultra-audio-CD-neo-champion's edition III (or SHMUACDNCE3 for short)

      --
      Never fight naked, unless you're in prison...
    2. Re:"Often compared to vinyl" by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

      You forgot to add "Titanium", "Pro", and "Xtreme".

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    3. Re:"Often compared to vinyl" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I even tried going to live shows but I'm still not convinced that I'm hearing the "true" sound.

  54. Sometimes people in life amaze me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sometimes wonder how many people that post in here are actually over the age of 16.

    1. Sony isn't interested in stopping EVERYONE. They are just like MS. They want to stop the average consumer from being able to copy the music & software. Will it work? Time will tell, but how many people do you think will be hooking up lines to their pc and recording each song track by track of tons of cds? Very few.

    Well, what about the *1* guy that does that and shares it? Won't it spread?

    2. You can just bet that in a few years down the line, most filesharing programs will not have individuals sharing music or movies. Why? Well, the RIAA is now going after individuals as in the current request for the personal info of an individual sharing a good number of licensed songs over one of the many programs out there. Will they win? Probably. The RIAA will sue enough people to get people scared to share. Yes, it will happen.

    Well maybe you're right. So what about SACD-roms? When they are released everyone can copy the dumb music!

    3. Do you honestly believe SONY is stupid enough to create a new technology that currently can GREATLY hinder the ripping/copying/etc of music, and then forget to put a small clause in the license contract stating that licensees are not allowed to produce SACD-roms for obvious reasons. I think not.

    Will this format work?

    4. Yes. There is one thing about sony that is different from other companies. They don't know when to give up. Even in the day and age of small mp3 players, they still push their minidisc players. A dead format which no one in their right mind would consider using now that USB mp3 players take about 60s to copy 100mb to. And don't even get me started on their memory sticks that work in just about every sony device. So back to the question of will it fail. I doubt it, as long as it does what sony claims. At least it will be around for awhile.

    Well what about fair use? I want to make a copy of the music to listen to on my mp3 player.

    5. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you think that it's violated here, you do not understand what it means. Whenever a new format is introduced, a company is not (big word) *required* to provide you a method to back up the content. Yes, you are probably allowed to backup the SACD, but no, a way to do so need not be provided.

    Well screw it, I'll just rip the normal audio data on there.

    6. How much longer once this format gains acceptance do you think that the lower quality tracks will remain on there? Does this even need to be explained?

    Finally, will piracy ever be stopped? Yea, flame if you will, but we all see it coming. The day when we have to connect to some server in who knows where under who knows what encryption and verify that we own the music / movies / software. By that time though, households will all have OC3 ^.^ connections and file storage lockers on some server. All purchases will be secure and products will be saved in the locker. You can play your digital content from there. And guess what MS will own it and we will all have flying cars by then. But for now? Piracy will just go underground. That's what its all about guys. Fess up, no one cares about backing up their music. We just care about getting sh*t for free.

    Life's short. Find something you like. Do it well whatever it may be, and have fun.

  55. Thanks for clarifying by evilviper · · Score: 1
    SACD players will only play discs with valid watermarks.

    *Annoyed Grunt*. Damn, I thought they'd play all the discs with my invalid, watermark.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  56. so what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it only plays watermarked CDs why don't we all visit circuit city to pretend that we are testing the sound quality of our CD-Rom playback when in fact we would be testing whether or not they play the discs. How stupid does Sony think the consumer is?

    We'll then post the models of their equipment which are affected to the web and blacklist those.

    1. Re:so what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well that will not work since the discs will probably say SACD on them for several reasons.

      1. people who buy SACD players want to know which discs are SACDs they can listen to them. or else how will it gain acceptance?

      2. Uhh. don't you possibly think that since this IS no longer *just* a cd-rom that they are not allowed to put the name *CD-ROM* on the case anymore?

  57. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think (s)he only missed two letters:

    IF the format catches on, expect future releases to work on ly on SACD.

  58. DONT CLICK PARENT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If you dont know what it links to, you DONT want to know!

    1. Re:DONT CLICK PARENT by Ig0r · · Score: 0, Troll

      People need to know what will happen to them if they buy into the SACD format!
      I'm just warning them...

      --
      Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
  59. Now I have to copy at REAL TIME again! by rMortyH · · Score: 1

    Damn! I'm back to the days of my double cassette deck! I have to copy my music in real-time again!

    The five minute copy was nice while it lasted.

    As for the watermark stuff, yes, these will fail more readily if scratched. But, that was all part of the CD plan. In the 80's they said, "they'll never wear out!" From *PLAYING* that is. Of course they'll wear out!

    Once they're on a hard drive, I have no more use for the original disk except as a backup copy. I don't think that will change.

    THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH THIS! I don't trade music except in rare instances, I just don't feel like getting up and changing all those damn disks all the time! And I'm not gonna dammit!! A little analog loss is not enough to make me do it!! HA!

  60. one simple mistake by ProofOfConcept · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this wont catch on for a very simple reason: its name. SACD. say it out loud. ess-ay-see-dee. its long and inconvinient. people like things thats are short and roll off there tongue. unless they change their name, they aren't going far.

    1. Re:one simple mistake by Myxyplik · · Score: 1
      this wont catch on for a very simple reason: its name. SACD. say it out loud. ess-ay-see-dee. its long and inconvinient. people like things thats are short and roll off there tongue. unless they change their name, they aren't going far.

      Or you could say it "sacked", as in "Sony sacked the consumer"! Heh!

    2. Re:one simple mistake by serutan · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think if we just pronounce it "sacked" we'll pretty much have the whole concept down.

  61. Re:Two things by freeefalln · · Score: 1

    the thing is, while the stones and zeppelin are good and extremely influential, people need to get over them being gods. there are PLENTY of fantastic great bands nowadays. Fugazi, Counting Crows, Smashing Pumpkins, Nirvana, U2. In fact, I'm one who just cant stand led zeppelin.

  62. hey, by tux-sucks · · Score: 1

    does a peice of scotch tape patch this one up too?

    1. Re:hey, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm waiting for the new format that lets you pee on the disc to remove the copy protection. Although, you wouldn't want to use it again.

      Headlines: "DMCA violated! Man in Best Buy was telling people to piss on the new PACD to remove the copy protection!"

  63. The yamaha CRW-F1 may be the response. by way2trivial · · Score: 0

    the review of this cdrw which I skimmed a few days ago at cnet
    http://computers.cnet.com/hardware/0-1095-405-2019 2504.html?tag=rev-rev

    includes the ability to
    " the drive also supports an intriguing new technology dubbed DiscT@2, which lets you "tattoo" images onto CD-R media."

    hmm, maybe it'll burn a watermark.,

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  64. Re:On the other hand by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

    Who cares? The only way we'll change anything is to vote with our feet: strange new players, detracted from the age-old standard means we all have to upgrade and follow the whim of good Ole Jack.

    I say, screw'em. We've only got 30-60 years of recorded music...and almost everything we have is on mp3s anyway...and all the new stuff is so soul-less and cut-n-pasted from other bands, why pay more and get less?

    If they produce a few hundred thousand of these titles and then have to pay to have'em destroyed, that'll send a bigger message than anything ever posted on SlashDot!

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  65. This is about PROPERTY people! by Sanity · · Score: 3, Flamebait
    The copyright cartel are right about one thing, this is about property, it is about my right to know that property which I own won't spy on me, or prevent me from doing things that I have a legal and moral right to do, such as exercise fair use over copyrighted work.

    Computers, and electronic devices in general, are increasingly an important way in which we interact with the world around us. They are increasingly our eyes, ears, and voice in this digital age, and they should work for us, their owners, not an amoral corporation determined to milk our culture for profit.

    This is not to say that I disagree with people, or groups of people, working for profit, but I do disagree with the government tipping the balance in their favor at the expense of those who they are supposed to represent.

    You wouldn't tolerate a Cop sitting in your home guarding, not you, not even the rest of society, but some faceless corporation who doesn't care about anything but their own profit - so why tolerate a Cop in your computer or CD player?

  66. Re:Two things by Ig0r · · Score: 0, Troll

    Sony hates you.
    It does love your money though, so just keep forking it out.

    --
    Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
  67. Ew. by Kitsune · · Score: 2, Insightful

    DSD? Sounds an awful lot like how the good old FM radio works.

    Still it doesn't sound like it will stop you from ripping the CDs, as much as making it harder for you to extract the extra information... why would you want 5.1 on your earphones anyways? ;)

    Unfortunately, hearing that because Sony is on a promotional drive to sneakly setting up to take over the market worries me. It seems in some ways, one crazy copy protection scheme is to keep the technology changing so quickly that the tools and hardware remain out of reach of the consumer.

    But, if that's the case, doesn't that stifle creativity? Fledgling musicians, artists will be compelled to use the lastest media and may not be able to distribute their work and make any profit to continue. I remember considering buying some music of a great little indie group a couple of years ago and didn't bother since they only had cassettes and those were 20$.

  68. Well, yeah... by Mulletproof · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Anybody who's a slash regular is gonna know. Have some faith.

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
    1. Re:Well, yeah... by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      It's like rookie hazing here on Slashdot. If you're too dumb to figure out that "goatse.cx" is probably not a family friendly site, you deserve to see it.

  69. The geeks seem to have forgotten... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The geeks seem to have forgotten that they are not the targets of the copy protection. The geeks are too small in numbers to matter. Anything that makes copying a little more difficult for the numerous high schoolers that barely know how to copy audio CDs on their PC's CD-RW is a big win for the labels.

    1. Re:The geeks seem to have forgotten... by ces · · Score: 1

      Problem is people in high-school and college have done this for at least 35 years. In the old days they'd just copy each other's record collection to reel-to-reel or cassete tapes.

      Of course what was (and still is) far more popular was making "comp tapes". It seems the studios are in the process of wiping out this time honored tradition in order to ensure no uncontroled, non-market-researched, toll-free use of their "product" is allowed by the "consumer"

      Fuck the RIAA!

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
  70. How about FFTs? by dachshund · · Score: 1
    There are a number of supposed benefits to recording using Direct Stream Digital, but it's difficult to edit without converting first to PCM

    I didn't know that.

    Incidentally, are there fast algorithms for converting PWM data to and from the frequency domain, without first going to PCM (I'm thinking of an FFT equivalent)? I ask because I'm curious how difficult it would be to encode and decode perceptually-compressed audio to a PWM DAC.

  71. Useless by dmarx · · Score: 1
    Don't expect to be able to play or reproduce these on your computer anytime soon.

    If I can't play them on my computer, to listen to music that I bought and paid for while I work, then these SACDs are useless to me.

    --
    "Do I dare disturb the universe?"
  72. Sony "sneakily" distributing it? by Inoshiro · · Score: 2

    Hardly. In their Spring 2002 in the audio section, the have the first page (like their other sections) discussing the excatly technical details of specs so the consumer can make an informed decision. Super Audio CD is described there. All they standalone CD players that also do it are tagged as such. It's not like Ninjas come into your house at night and rip the little black tape off the SACD logo a week after you buy it.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
    1. Re:Sony "sneakily" distributing it? by HimalayanRoadblock · · Score: 1

      Actually that explains the broken glass around my new CD player. Here I was thinking it was SONY's technical support replacing my defective one. {There was tape over the infared port and it said if I removed it I faced stiff penalty of law)

  73. "2.8MHz sampling rate" by i_am_nitrogen · · Score: 2
    Of course, the 2.8 MHz sampling rate is ridiculous (24bit/96KHz is more than enough for almost anything)


    That's 2.8MHz at 1-bit precision. See, sound is encoded on a SACD kind of based on density. The greater the amplitude, the greater the density of the on bits. This way, the audio can be rudimentarily decoded by passing the 2.8MHz stream through a 22kHz (or 30kHz if you want to annoy your dog as well as your neighbors) or so low-pass filter. You can convert that 2.8MHz 1-bit stream into a 192kHz/24-bit stream, or a 96kHz/32-bit stream, or whatever you want, because the sound information is still there. I'm not sure exactly how they convert an analog stream into a 2.8MHz stream of 1-bit data, because I'm getting my information from the super audio CD official website. (...like they'd give away crucial information to their competitors before all the patents are approved...) I'm sure it's just an engineering problem.

  74. actually hearing 24 bit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Since most humans ear have difficulting actually hearing the performance difference that 24-bit res gives (usually more around 18-20 range)the post from someone early about pluging into an digital/analog is a perfect solution since even with some quality loss it should still sound better than 16-bit CD quality (although since your original source of music will be 16-bit your data loss will mean you are hearing some kind of 13-bit actual sound quality.

    Solution. Don't buy SACD, do buy DVD-Audio (comes with 24-bit res) don't buy Creative Labs products (they advertise 24-bit res, but downsample to far less in actuality) do buy other real or true 24-bit solutions (see M-Audio, Terratec) . Don't use MP3 compression (16-bit) do use .WMA Professional from MICROSOFT (aach!) coming in Sept. (24-bit lossless compression)

  75. Do we really have the right to stop buying...? by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Of course we have the right to stop buying their crap, except that...

    The music industry is an oligopoly. A handful of players control the market. I'm not really concerned about Sony's offering, per se. But if AOL/TimeWarner, et. al. start using the same technology, there isn't really much chance that "some other" company will come along and seize the opportunity, because there are no other companies.

    Plus, if an artist is under Sony distribution, the only alternative means of distribution is P2P, which is under increasing attack both legal and technological, from the RIAA.

    This ain't a free market, boyo.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Do we really have the right to stop buying...? by tempfile · · Score: 1

      No, the music industry is a monopoly. If Warner releases artist X's new album in a fair-use-restricting format, say SACD, and only that, there's no way of getting hold of a CD or vinyl record of that album from a competing label.

    2. Re:Do we really have the right to stop buying...? by Infonaut · · Score: 2
      It's semantics. Depending on your interpretation of the word "monopoly", it can apply to either one company, or to a group of companies applying cartel practices.

      But regardless of whether it is a monopoly or an oligopoly, or a basketball, the effect is still the same - it blows ass!

      --
      Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  76. You can use an external DAC by HowIsMyDriving? · · Score: 1

    You can use an external DAC to decode regular cds. The SACD format is much higher than 96/192khz. It is about 1.2 MHZ (I am not kidding) The only time you were correct was about 3 years ago when the SACD-1 (which was 5k) came out. Also Phillips, Marantz, Cary audio, Classe, and many other brands do use SACD. I have a Marantz SACD player at my house.

    --
    Welcome to the Entropy Bar, may I take your order?
    1. Re:You can use an external DAC by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 2

      I'm seeing SACD specs as being 100kHz bandwidth, 120 dB dynamic range, with the same quality for all channels.

      So are they saying 100kHz bandwidth meaning the carrier would have to be 200kHz? 120 dB is about 24-bit. 6 channels of full quality, is 200kHz*6, giving you 1200kHz == 1.2MHz.

    2. Re:You can use an external DAC by HowIsMyDriving? · · Score: 1

      sorry, its actually 2.8 mhz for bandwith. so if you do the division, it would be roughly 450 khz. I am not sure that it works this way, as I only have a 2 channel setup. The problem with having the external DAC is many times SACDs are 6 channel, and no DAC out there (That I know of) can do 6.1 Dolby Processing. I am not sure if this arument works with PCM decoding, since I don't know much about it.

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      Welcome to the Entropy Bar, may I take your order?
    3. Re:You can use an external DAC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No each channel on SACD is sampled at 2.8 Mhz.

  77. MiniDisc by CPM+User · · Score: 1

    Sony have been pushing MiniDisc as ( I shit you not ) a studio mastering format for years. I dare say that this would be their 'approved' system. Needless to say, it is not even close to being acceptable for this purpose.

    Most of BBC radio 1 uses Minidisc at the moment ( lots of audible fsck-ups live on air ) for some unknown reason - if anyone can tell me why, I would like to know.

    Do not buy Sony products. To do so would be like a turkey voting for Christmas ( or Thanksgiving for USA'ians )

    1. Re:MiniDisc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MiniDisc allows random-access editing -- unlike CD-R, unlike tape.

      Now if Sony would only update the disc capacity (140/160 MB is silly, they should have MD-sized discs that hold well over a gigabyte) and offer more recording options (e. g., add 48/24 stereo recording with no/lossless compression), they'd have something really neat.

  78. Could Be by carrier+lost · · Score: 1
    Fuck you, indie shithead. You knuckle under, you suck our cock, and maybe we'll buy your company with loose change and pay your artists a few pennies on the CD, like we do with our artists".

    Hol' on there, lil' bucaroo. So an entire decent, working, accepted hardware platform is abandoned? Gee, guess what? The indie crowd suddenly has a home!

    Can't get cool stuff to play on your old CD hardware? Fear not dear friend, we here at Indi# have just the tunes for you!

    voila!

    (at least, that's a hopeful scenario...)

    MjM

    I only mod up...

    1. Re:Could Be by rodgerd · · Score: 3, Informative

      It already happens. At the local film-fests, there's usually one or two really interesting things only distributed on VHS (or BetaMax, or some variation thereof), because that's the best quality format people can duplicate and send around the world without being a major studio. Once you could only get tapes or the odd 45 of small, interesting bands.

      What's changed over the years is that people have been able to cheaply and easily produce in higher quality formats. Instead of accepting my friend's band will only ever release on tape, I know they'll be able to cut CDs to demo, and produce a whole album, probably with a better recording studio than was available 20 years ago (for any money - and that studio can now be built cheap, apart from the physical environment) at a price so cheap they can sell CDs at their gigs for NZD$10 a pop.

      That's very empowering for the artists, just as the existence of cheaps CGI has allowed small moviemakers to make an indie film (like The Irrefutable Truth About Demons) that isn't another Go Fish or Clerks.

      Combine that with a ability to easily and cheaply distribute high quality information (compared to traditional distribution mechanisms) and you've got a real threat to the existing regime - because the likes of Sony Entertainment and 20th Century Fox are big because they have distribution networks stitched up, and get a slice of every pie. Even if you're independent, if you want your art to be available to anyone other than a small slice of the potenetial audience, you'll have to deal with the distribution arm and fork over your money.

      Forget piracy - what scares MPAA and RIAA members is that their cosy little oligopily is threatened by the potential for the re-emergence of the old small-to-medium studios like Elektra who could eat their lunch. And that, incidentally is why all the laws this mob lobby for specify minimum damages for IP theft - if I (or they) steal the IP of a small indie, you can't claim squat. If I steal a copy of crap bands or the Season 7 Buffy, I get hammered.

  79. If they're trying so hard... by natsith · · Score: 1

    I'm going to figure out how to connect to the digital signals before they're converted to analog in my cd player. I don't think that will be too hard.

  80. Re:Two things by askii64 · · Score: 0

    I'll be listening to Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik years from now, I'll bet. Sorry, just had to reply. =)

    --

    -This quite possibly mangled, stupid, demented comment was brought to you by Askii64.
  81. The Ultimate Question - A Way for Free Music... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Alright, here is a question that has been bothering me for awhile. Just flow with me and tell me what you
    think after you have read it all. Replay TV and all that crap that lets you record stuff is legal so it seems
    at the current time. So, here is the hypo.

    Step 1. Buy Satellite TV and purchase the music stations. You know, the ones that play all that music but
    no videos.

    Step 2. Have a minor purchase a tivo or similar device and complete the remainder. Reason being is that if
    there are any user agreements that are included within the tivo purchase, enforcable upon opening
    the box, obviously the minor can dissafirm and continue use until its requested back one would assume.

    Step 3. With the Tivo or similar device, record all the music you can fit on the internal HD (upgrade it first
    to 160gb ^.^). Dismantel the device, remove the HD, connect it to your pc, rip the audio for each song
    out from the blank video. Delete the data on the tivo drive. Convert all the audio to mp3s now.
    Rinse and repeat.

    Again, this is a hyo. Lets stem the above into two directions with different outcomes in search of solutions.

    a. Assuming this is legal, which so far it seems since at the moment it appears to be legal buy them at your
    local stores. (Good way to determine legality heh, "but I bought it at the store?" "Sorry son, you are
    going to jail")

    Now setup a server to share the music with anoyone that can prove they also have access to the satellite
    music stations. I believe that the tivo's are legal since they fall under fair use?

    Would this sharing with other members that subscribe to the service be legal? I'd assume though that there is
    not yet a determined minimum time limit to be subscribed. I'd figure that as soon as you sign up for those
    satellite channels, you are given fair use over anything broadcast?

    b. I suppose A and B should have been switched. The question here is if the above minus the file sharing with
    other individuals is legal.

    Alright, have at it.

    1. Re:The Ultimate Question - A Way for Free Music... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But I bought it at the store!"

      "I don't care - you SHOT someone!"

      Same thing. Oh sure, not the consequences, but the general idea.

  82. A little humor by MasterVidBoi · · Score: 2, Funny

    I was wondering what this might be refering to. I guess this may be it.

  83. Is there a big difference? by pgrote · · Score: 2

    How big can the difference in quality be? If a normal person with no musical ability, say, like myself, listens to both a CD and the new format could I tell a difference? Is it as pronounced as moving from tape to CD?

    1. Re:Is there a big difference? by elveu · · Score: 1

      from what i understand you should be able to hear a diffrence. however it's just a matter of if you care enough about the diffrence to but it. i remember getting excited about these a few years ago thinking they were going to be able to have the same sound as a record, unfortunatly not but there will be a noticable improvment.

    2. Re:Is there a big difference? by pgrote · · Score: 2

      A record sounds better than a CD?

    3. Re:Is there a big difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

  84. Yay Harman/Kardon! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Harman/Kardon)++

    Mmm, SoundSticks...

    1. Re:Yay Harman/Kardon! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Harmon Kardon sucks my wang

  85. Digital output is on the way. by willy_me · · Score: 2
    From the article:

    The SACD specification currently provides for digital output of the DSD data stream using a proprietary interface only. This enables players to use separated transports or specialized amplifiers which can decode DSD. Currently players from Sharp, Accuphase and dCS implement such an interface. At this time there is no open digital interface standard though a protocol is under consideration. Until receivers, pre-amplifiers etc. implement a corresponding interface, digital output is of no use however. Most players support digital output for CDs and the CD-compatible layer of hybrid SACDs.

    So once a protocol is created I'm sure all the new players will support it. Also note that current players can still support digital output - it's just it'll use the CD data in place of the higher quality SACD data.

    Personally, I really like the idea of an open standard. If it truely is open, someone will be able to take that digital data and convert it into MP3/AIFF/WAV directly. Very nice.

  86. As the old saying goes... by ripewithdecay · · Score: 0

    If you can hear it, you can duplicate it.

  87. bah, humbug by flip-flop · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This whole SACD stuff is just a sneaky way of trying to replace the CD with something the RIAA and their minions have more control over. The audio CD's acoustic format is sufficient even for the finest ear. I challenge anyone to be able to distinguish CD from SACD in a blind listening test. See something like this thread on Hydrogen Audio if you don't believe me...

  88. Re:On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    I say, screw'em. We've only got 30-60 years of recorded music...and almost everything we have is on mp3s anyway...

    Are you for real? You are claiming we only have recorded music going back as far somewhere between 1972 and 1942? Records were invented in 1877, so you're off by just a little bit there. Shoot, even the first flat circular records (as opposed to cylinders) date back to 1887!

    Zane

  89. Damn and I just bought a Sony MD Player last week! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this really relavant to anyone but audiophiles? I understand that you can hear a difference which will be great for the living room.

    However, I rarely listen to my home system for anything other than 5.1 from my DVD player. Any sound benefit will be lost when you compress the songs to MP3 for the computer or MP3 Player. I would guess that even with digital out to my minidisk player would lose the added benefit when it converted to ADTRAC by the player.

  90. Are you sure? by john82 · · Score: 1

    There's no way that the majority of people are going to replace huge CD collections with SA-CDs.

    Think about that for a moment. Replace CD & SA-CD with vinyl & CD. Sound familiar? Do I still have a stack of LPs? Yes. Do I listen to them or my CDs? The CDs of course.

  91. Sure, you can... by dfenstrate · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...copy protect cowboy neal, at least by natural methods.

    Cut his balls off.

    This would be analogous to a "digital" copy protection scheme, as if they cloned him, with the current state of biotech, they'd end up with an inferior, short-lived copy, AFTER 80 failed attempts to get anything to live in the first place.

    Of course, his +5 Geekfield probably also has a side effect of repelling all nubile females, so you probably don't have to worry anyway. Though Cmd Taco overcame this limitation...

    (No ill will truly meant towards Cowboy Neal, it was a joke that had to be made.)

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    1. Re:Sure, you can... by Col.+Panic · · Score: 1

      Cut his balls off.

      And make a clone with them?

  92. DVD-A v SACD by RedWizzard · · Score: 2

    Around here I've seen SACD players but no DVD-A players, so for the moment Sony's ahead (here, at least). Like DVD-A SACD has no regional encoding so that's no a problem. The lack of digital out is quite annoying though. Utlimately the winner will be the format that gets the most support from the media providers, and I expect a lot of systems capable of supporting DVD-A and SACD will appear until one or the other dies.

    1. Re:DVD-A v SACD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I think the winner will be who can sell the most software. If it was hardware, DVD-A would already be the winner but. methinks, the so-called audiophiles have a preference for SACD given that most of the audiophile labels have expressed a preference for SACD (re; just look at who is releasing titles in either format) and as a result, more titles have been released in SACD.

      DVD-A should have already won due to a clear advantage with DVD-V (indeed, I suspect most new DVD-V hardware will support DVD-A), But SACD has the clear edge if consumers are looking for replacements for their CDs and CD players (e.g. The Rolling Stones remasters with hybrid SACDs/CDs due out 8/27/02).

      Copyprotection could be an issue but what is stopping you from redirecting the SACD/DVD-A/CD analog output to a sound card, and subsequently ripping it to MP3 ? In fact, an SACD "ripped" via ADC to a CD--R might sound better than it's (BB bought) CD counterpart.

    2. Re:DVD-A v SACD by GlassUser · · Score: 2

      Betamax was also first, and had superior quality. It was also not a standard (I don't call someone's proprietary format a standard). It was also made by Sony. See a pattern?

    3. Re:DVD-A v SACD by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      Betamax was also first, and had superior quality. It was also not a standard (I don't call someone's proprietary format a standard). It was also made by Sony. See a pattern?
      Yes I do: Sony are innovative. They failed with Betamax because there was no room for multiple standards and they failed to recognise the importance of rentals. But plenty of other Sony proprietary technology has done just fine, even if they haven't become a dominant force in the market. MiniDisc and Memory Stick are obvious examples. If you think Sony will repeat the mistakes they made with Betamax you'll be suprised.

      To me it looks like neither format will win any time soon. The most likely outcome is that in a year or two the majority of players will handle both DVD-A and SACD, in the same way that most DVD players handle VCD.

    4. Re:DVD-A v SACD by GlassUser · · Score: 2

      Eh, as far as I can tell, minidisc and memorystick are pretty much failures too. I know one person who uses minidisc (well, "know" on IRC, he lives 2000 miles away and I've never met him in person). I don't know anyone that uses memorystick. I actually know several people that, at one time, had a betamax player. That would seem to indicate that, while still a dismal failure, was less of one than the other two you mentioned.

    5. Re:DVD-A v SACD by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      MiniDisc is definitely alive. Maybe not in the US, but remember US != World. I can go into a store and buy a MiniDisc player. I can even get prerecorded MiniDiscs (though not many). MiniDisc has been around for 10 years and doesn't look like disappearing anytime soon. Betamax didn't last half that long.

      That you don't know anyone who uses Memory Stick merely proves that you don't know anyone with a Sony digital camera. A lot of Sony stuff has Memory Stick slots, including cameras, walkmans, and laptops.

    6. Re:DVD-A v SACD by GlassUser · · Score: 2

      You may have me on the minidisc side. I don't know it well enough. Nobody I really know has one, and CD works just as well for me. For memorystick, most people I know have specifically avoided sony digicams, because of this. They'd much rather (and more wisely, IMO) have CF.

    7. Re:DVD-A v SACD by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      I too would be hesitant to buy a Sony camera because of the proprietary nature of the Memory Stick, but people do buy them. There are some pluses too, Memory Stick is smaller and it has been easier to get higher capacity Memory Sticks. I've seen a few cool gadgets too, like USB optical mice with built in Memory Stick readers.

      Anyway to drag this back to SACD v DVD-A, my point is that Sony have a track record of producing high quality technology when they are unhappy with the alternatives. They also will adopt existing technology if it's good enough - e.g. FireWire, DVD Video. IMHO, the most likely reason why Sony have gone it alone is the potential for hybrid CD/SACD discs. After thinking a bit I can now see some more advantages to hybrids - the biggest being portability. A hybrid CD/SACD will play in my home SACD player and also my car CD, my CD walkman, and my computer. DVD-A will require a complete upgrade of all my gear, especially if their promised copy-protection technology does prevent me making MP3 or CD copies.

    8. Re:DVD-A v SACD by GlassUser · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right, Sony does produce pretty much the highest quality consumer-level electronics (at least consistently) - my home entertainment system is almost entirely Sony (I just couldn't find any cabinets with their logo . . .). The thing is that I refuse to buy anything of theirs that relies on proprietary technology (like memorystick). If it's supported in addition to a standard, that's fine, I just won't use the proprietary bit, but I refuse to rely on proprietary technology.

      BACK to SACD, it sounds good, yes. But I don't like the proprietary nature. I'll be more enthusiastic when non-sony-licensed/blessed hardware can read it in its entirety. I don't have links, but I've heard that the read quality of the redbook-compatible layer is significantly worse than that of a true redbook disc. Also, I'm not entirely sure about the idea of having two separate data streams that aren't in some way tied together (ex they may just put teaser content on the redbook-compatible layer, saying listen to the digital layer for all this great stuff!). Excepting that, and the issues of outputs tied to encrypted digital out, I think it sounds like it has some potential. But personally, I'll wait till there's a standard.

    9. Re:DVD-A v SACD by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      I agree re the proprietary nature of SACD, but I think that SACD will become a true standard if it is successful. I'm just as nervous about DVD-A. For a start the RIAA has been involved in it's conception, and it therefore has "anti-piracy" features, including audio watermarking. It will also require licensing, in the same way that CD, and DVD-Video does. To me it looks like it comes down to SACD - a format developed by Sony and Philips, licensable from them (terms undisclosed), or DVD-A - a format developed by a larger group of companies, licensable from them (terms undisclosed, but possibly less onerous). Note too that the CD redbook standard was developed by Sony and Philips and requires a license from them. And Sony and Philips developed the MMCD (multimedia CD) spec, that combined with Toshiba/Time Warner's SD (Super Disc) spec became DVD.

      My point here is that I don't think we need to get too hung up on the fact that SACD is comming from Sony and Philips alone. They have a good track record for licensing their technology, and in the past their formats have gone on to become widely available standards.

  93. Agreed... more so, your point's allready proved by Ted_Green · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As far as "pirating" the lossy mp3 format is king, and in the eyes of the IP industry, their greatest threat.

    The fact that most mp3s found are in 128kb, a bit rate that quite frankly is *not* CD quality and not as good as the orginal, already puts the lie to the "perfect copy" myth. (that is to say pirates can get perfect copies of the orginal)

    Not to drag the DMCA into this, but this is one of the most distressing things about its anti copyright circumvention clauses. Those who pirate rarely, if ever, copy a media perfectly. (Anyone who's seen an internet movie can atest to that.) They don't need to so long as their copy is "good enough".
    In practice the only thing the DMCA clause amounts to is a soap box for the RIAA and the MPAA to stand on.

    1. Re:Agreed... more so, your point's allready proved by agnosonga · · Score: 1

      use ogg and encode with higher bit rates

    2. Re:Agreed... more so, your point's allready proved by Drizzten · · Score: 1

      The "perfect copy" is only partially true. It is rare for the original copy to be a "perfect" one in respect to resolution and quality since it is almost always downgraded/compressed to make it easier for others to download. It is true, however, that "perfect copies" of that original can be made and are. If that source copy is good enough, the distinction is lost on the masses and they accept the myth.

      --

      "All mankind is at the mercy of a handful of neurotics". - Norman Douglas
  94. Not so... by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    China-brand electronics maker may release one with a digital out, but even a $2,500 receiver wouldn't know what to do with it.

    Let's take an Onkyo 989 receiver as example. It can decode PCM, DTS, and Dolby Digital, none of which an SACD uses. The DSD format that it is recorded in was specifically designed to skirt the tinny sound of PCM audio. Of course, there was the added benefit of "thwarting" "pirates". SACDs and DVD-Audio disc players output their music audio in analog, predecoded. That way, there's no issue for the receiver to understand it. Really the only way to handle it would be to acquire a pre-decoder as people did in the early days of the 5.1 era, and patch it in over a DB-25 connection.

    So we'd run into a bit of a chicken and egg issue. If I don't have a receiver that can decode a DSD signal, I would have no reason to buy china-brand SACD player. If there's no market for people looking for such a player, then china-brand isn't going to squander its measley per-unit profits on a processor to output such a signal. You'd also be dealing with a market ("audiophiles") which would take one look at China-brand and pass on by to the $1,000 SACD player. The non-audiophile public might buy it, but they'd buy them for the same reason they buy china-brand nowadays: price, not the unique features.

    I don't doubt it might happen, but it would have to be a long ways off. The audio world has already established that it's willing to pay large amount of money for patch cables to sustain analog signals. There would need to be a more serious desire in the audiophile world to make them dump existing equipment in order to accommodate the digital output of the new format.

  95. Ripping by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

    When there is no CD Layer you will have to get the SACD info, but you can't just take the "analog" data from the RCA jack, you have to add in a matched inductor to turn the PWM into a real analog signal!

    Another good (technical) play by Sony.

    But, who are we really kidding? Someone will find a way to copy them before too long.

  96. This seems fair by Gyorg_Lavode · · Score: 1
    Other than the fact that the standard seems closed, this seems like a fair tradeoff. Copy protection is always increased by a change of medium. A change of medium in the CD industry is required anyway (from the indstructy point of view not only for copy protection but also to increase sales of music re-released on the new format).

    We as consumers get out of this much higher quality music. It is relatively win-win other than the fact that sony does not deserve to control a standard format.

    I know we all would like to copy our music to our computer. They won't stop this. At the low end you can do analog copies. At the high end I am sure it will be devised how to make digital copies and most likely someone will just release a player with a digital out. So what if you can't burn that SACD to play in your player? You can get a more technical, less used player solution to get your high quality. But the masses will not copy in high quality and will only have low quality copies which DOES seem like a fair trade off. You can rip, download, burn low quality music, but if you want high quality you'll need good, relatively costly and rare hardware or to buy the SACD.

    The compromises between quality and copying are fair other than sony wanting to control them.

    --
    I do security
    1. Re:This seems fair by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Based on what I've seen, no significant body would trade a .5 gigabyte song online anyways.

      All .mp3.

      Mooo......

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  97. DSD is heavily dithered PCM by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Incidentally, are there fast algorithms for converting PWM data to and from the frequency domain

    DSD is essentially 1-bit PCM, similar to that used in "1-bit DAC" CD players. It can be window-FFT'd into the frequency domain just like any other PCM; you just have to discard the top 63/64 of the spectrum. Going back from window-FFT to 1-bit PCM is a matter of going to 24-bit PCM, oversampling, and then using heavy dithering. However, most audio coding (MP3 or Vorbis) uses MDCT rather than FFT because MDCT is real and overlapping, better matching the characteristics of audio.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re: DSD is heavily dithered PCM by pjrc · · Score: 2
      DSD is essentially 1-bit PCM, similar to that used in "1-bit DAC" CD players. It can be window-FFT'd into the frequency domain just like any other PCM; you just have to discard the top 63/64 of the spectrum. Going back from window-FFT to 1-bit PCM is a matter of going to 24-bit PCM, oversampling, and then using heavy dithering.

      I sure hope there's some noise shaping going on in the process, cause 2.82 MHz divided by 44.1 kHz is an oversampling ratio of only 64. With conventional PWM (no noise shaping), that's only 6 bits per sample.

      So if you attempt to encode, don't forget to pass the samples through a 4th order (or higher) delta-sigma modulator.

  98. No chance of suceeding by EdMcMan · · Score: 1
    This particular copy protection will fail, miserably. Why? First of all, not everyone is going to buy a Sony (In fact, I'm never buying anything from them again, including a PS2) player. This basically means that the only company that will use this technology is well... Sony.

    Now, if Sony really wants this to suceed, they'll have to open their standards out to other companies. But, as soon as they do that, someone will make a "watermark-free player".

  99. Ultimate goal is a media format that THEY control by ripaway · · Score: 1

    Some of the posts alluded to this, but the ultimate goal of SACD and, to a lesser extent, DVD-A is a format that the major content producers control, their by eliminating indie labels and musicsian from producing and selling high quality recordings. If you're a independent musician, and want to sell high quality recordings off your web site? You're stuck with cd's. If DVD-A is really an "open" standard, then maybe DVD pressers can press DVD-A's for anyone with enough money, much like CD pressers now can do for people who will pay for the glass masters and can deliver something to make that master from.

  100. Its not as bad as IBM using pallidium secretly by Billly+Gates · · Score: 3, Offtopic

    Anyone here who owns an IBM desktop or laptop wonder why they can not get linux to boot on it?

    Well according to the July edition of CPU magazine,(sorry its not online) IBM secretly implemented palidome drm chips implementating Microsoft/intel's trustworthy computing called tcpa in almost every desktop sold! Andhere are the crippled laptops, and here are the crippled servers. Infact the system is so locked down with each component trusting one another that if you replace the floppy drive for example the system will not run! Remember the motherboard and the eide card both trust the floppy drive with the right encyption sequence in it. Readit and weep.

    Oh and yes I submited this to Rob and he did not post it here. Grrr. I encourage everyone reading this to submit it as a story because this is x100 times as worse as what sony is doing.

  101. You know I was worried by Com2Kid · · Score: 1, Troll

    Until I remembered that I don't listen to RIAA crap.

    yah.

    1. Re:You know I was worried by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When 'they' came for the martians I didn't worry coz', you know, I'm not a martian.

      I think you know the rest.

    2. Re:You know I was worried by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      When 'they' came for the martians I didn't worry coz', you know, I'm not a martian.

      I think you know the rest.


      Quite frankly, anybody who starts out with taking out the hard core rockers + rappers ain't half bad in my book. :P

  102. Re:Its not as bad as IBM using pallidium secretly by BitHive · · Score: 1

    I'd mod you up if I had points.

  103. How does *any* device not have digital out? by pla · · Score: 1

    Okay, as a quick DMCA-violating exercise (from someone who has never even *seen* a SACD player, making claims that I may have reverse engineered it laughable):

    1) Open case.
    2) Trace the analog-out back to a chip.
    2b) If chip has heat-sink, trace back one more.
    3) Look up the specs of the chip on-line.
    4) Stick a probe on the digital input.
    5) Record probe signal.

    You now have a digital output, and this will work on *ANY* device, not just an SACD player. At worst, you might need invert the bits and reverse the bit order, which you can do easily in software.

    (Disclaimer - If you fry your new toy, don't come whining to me. You shoul have had a friend-with-a-clue do the above instead of trying it yourself)

    1. Re:How does *any* device not have digital out? by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      And they still haven't addressed recording from the audio out.

      Or have they removed that part of the system? :-)

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
    2. Re:How does *any* device not have digital out? by alienmole · · Score: 2
      3) Look up the specs of the chip on-line.

      Said chip is covered in very hard black goop. Now what do I do?

    3. Re:How does *any* device not have digital out? by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      As has been mentioned before, SACDs don't use PCM, so the digital signal, if you can find it, is totally useless.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    4. Re:How does *any* device not have digital out? by pla · · Score: 1

      SACDs don't use PCM, so the digital signal, if you can find it, is totally useless

      First, regardless of the format on the media itself, DACs generally convert from a fixed word size to an analog level. To cut costs (ie, not have to create their own custom DAC *just* to handle this one type of digital conversion), Sony would presumeably use off-the-shelf parts, meaning they basically need to convert to boring ol' PCM *before* running the signal through the DAC.

      Second, and more important, the actual disk just uses a 1-bit DPCM scheme. Sum that over time with a moving average window having the same temporal size as your desired resolution (ie, 22.675s to convert to the normal audio CD rate of 44.1khz), and you end up with the same results, ie, a "raw" PCM stream.

      I will concede, though, that your average MP3-lovin' cheapskate music pirate will not have any clue how to do *any* of the above (except maybe "open the case). For those of us who actually *do* buy music and just want a better way to listen to it (such as off a file server), we'll still have the convenience we want.

    5. Re:How does *any* device not have digital out? by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      To cut costs ... Sony would presumeably use off-the-shelf parts, meaning they basically need to convert to boring ol' PCM *before* running the signal through the DAC.

      Of course, if they are doing that, then we wouldn't be able to hear the supposed "better sound" of DirectStream Digital, since it would be converted into "inferior" PCM in the player anyway. Maybe that's the difference between last year's $2000+ SACD players and the $150 ones mentioned in the article, though. It wouldn't surprise me a bit if Sony is blowing smoke out their ass and ripping off consumers by promising something they're not delivering - that's the American way nowadays.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  104. Audio quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Audio quality is the key here.

    I can't tell a difference between 320K mp3's and 128K mp3's. I don't need any higher fidelity than the CD standard. Sure, make them hold more and make them smaller or shaped differently (yes a clear 1" cube would be neat) but I'm not buying anything that "sounds better than CD" because I can't tell a difference.

    As far as not being able to make copies of the SACD, that's bogus. Exact digital copies, not yet (who would want to because it's a proprietary format), but there's nothing stopping me from from taking SACD output to the line in on my soundcard. I highly doubt anyone could tell a difference from the original.

    As people have said before: "If it can be heard, it can be copied."

  105. yada yada by farnsworth · · Score: 1

    vinyl still sounds better.

    --

    There aint no pancake so thin it doesn't have two sides.

    1. Re:yada yada by elveu · · Score: 1

      yes this is true. however digital medium that is more durable is getting closer to vinal. it is a huge improvment over cd's and unlike vinal they don't degrage after being played too much. so don't throw out your vinals and turntable quite yet but these are going to be worth checking out.

  106. Audiophile BS by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Funny
    Audiophiles are always fun. They can sound a lot like proponents of alternative medicine. A few quotes from the Audiophile BS page:
    • "These cables deliver big time! The sound is surprsingly smooth and spacious, with particularly sweet upper octaves."
    • "Special wooden resonator disks made in Asia from a special tree, only found in one area. Placing these under EACH of your components, at strategic locations will remove 'unwanted resonances', and DRAMATIC improval tonal quality. The difference is astounding. These disks of wood sell for around $100 to $400 EACH (depending on size)."
    • "Harmonic textures ebbed and flowed with startling dynamic nuances and the sort of liquidity and purity one only comes to associate with world-class audio products."
    • "By using the $450 gold plated RCA stereo jumper cables for all line-level connections, and the newly available $1200 gold plated XYZ speaker wires, we were able to achieve a distinct improvement in highs and the deepest rich bass lows I have ever heard. A massive improvement over ordinary old copper."
    • Recently I got a pair of Acoustic Research 226PS bookshelf speakers and tried hooking them up with the lamp cord. The sound was dull and flat, better than the old speakers but it let the flaws in the wire [!] be heard.
    • "Rendition of harmonic colors was suave and smooth, with a believable sugar coating."
    • "Spatial detail was painted with a fine brush that readily resolved massed voices and the air around individual instruments."
    • "I just got through spray painting my dual BlackLight discs with flat colors. I did one side in classic forest green & the other in black. My impressions were very much like my brothers but with contradictory results. I liked black since it lowered the noise floor & increased channel separation even more which only further enhanced dynamics & detail simultaneously. He liked green because it's effect is very soothingly smooth. imagry transitions from channel to channel seemlessly, without huge sacrifices (eg: noise-floor raises about +10dB to around -110dB). It simply paints better between speakers."
    • "The Equilibre ($8,475) - nominally a 60-watt stereo amp."
    • "I found myself happily out of week-end work around the house lately and decided to replace the bubble wrap around my speaker cable; the air had leaked out of most of the pockets and it seemed like a good idea at the time... when it was done the effort proved worthwhile; bass was noticeably tighter and better delineated, more air around instruments in a clearer soundstage, voices somehow more expressive."

    I came up with one for Sony's SACD:
    "It felt like I had crawled into a warm and inviting sonic womb, where my fair use rights were gone."
    1. Re:Audiophile BS by mosch · · Score: 2

      You want a great laugh? Check out these CD tweaks.

    2. Re:Audiophile BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference does not 'blow you away', but on a good system the music sounds very natural, just like listening to a 30 IPS master tape and I've heard those. It's the best sound quality I've ever heard, short of a live performance, but CD sound is pretty good too, so the difference is not huge. Still, once you've spent some time listening to SACD you appreciate how 'right' it sounds.

    3. Re:Audiophile BS by laserjet · · Score: 2

      Holy shit. I had no idea they were THAT bad. Great quotes, though. They made me laugh.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    4. Re:Audiophile BS by sunspot42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I remain unconvinced. These SACDs are all recently remastered. CD mastering technology has improved greatly just over the past 5 years, thanks largely to the widespread introduction of 24-bit A/D converters, superior digital mixing consoles, improved computer-based sound processing programs, and greatly enhanced studio interest in production standards - the latter is the only real selling point for the scores of re-releases we've seen over the past few years. I don't know how effective it is to compare CDs that were mastered 10 years ago from an older analog source to SACDs mastered this year from that same source. Sony's SACD mastering equipment is all top-notch stuff, and they appear to be exerting quite a bit of quality control when it comes to these remasters. Compare that to the situation 10 or, heaven forbid, 20 years ago, when studios were shoveling stuff onto CDs with little regard for quality, as fast as their ovens could bake the tapes. (Yes, bake! The binder used on a lot of the original analog master tapes was hydrophilic. It absorbed water from the air, and got gummy over time, sticking to everything - itself, dirt, pinch rollers and worst of all playback heads. Many tapes had to be baked in an oven at low temperatures to drive off the water before they could safely be replayed. So, now rock stars aren't the only ones getting baked in the studios . . .)

      As I see it, the only way to effectively compare SACD with CD (let alone DVD Audio) is to take an analog master and convert it to digital for the three formats using today's latest technology, all from the same analog source deck, preferably without any subsequent equalization or other processing tricks. For all we know, some of these SACDs sound so great because somebody in the studio is twiddling a lot of knobs to sweeten their sound . . .

      Oh, and for the record, apparently not all SACD's sound so sweet, either. Just briefly checking Amazon.com for example, I found a couple of reviews of the SACD of Kind of Blue, the famous Miles Davis record, which suggested that the 1992 Sony remaster on plain vanilla CD sounded better (or at least as good). I'm sure there are probably other examples.

    5. Re:Audiophile BS by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      As I have said for years, Audiophiles are rich people that are pretty damned stupid.

      An amplifier is rated by it's THD and RMS power rating (Peak is pure bullcrap and anyone using it is a moron unless peak is directly coupled to THD as in ,"1500watts peak at 0.05%THD"

      By the Way , THD = Total Harmonic Distortion.. and I have had Craig car audio amps that Kicked the crap out of Rockford Phosgate amps that cost 10 times more by simply ignoring brand and shopping by watts versus THD. the lower the THD the better and 0.05% is common now days.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    6. Re:Audiophile BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm sure there are probably other examples."

      Sure - just like some people prefer the inferior sound of vinyl (with their compressed sound, distortion, and reduction in sound quality in each play) to CDs.

    7. Re:Audiophile BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As I have said for years, Audiophiles are rich people that are pretty damned stupid."
      Unlike you? I am sure it takes an IMPRESSIVE amount of intelligence to figure out that people who spend thousands of dollars on their STEREO are RICH?

    8. Re:Audiophile BS by barjam · · Score: 1

      Run that craig at 1 ohm, let me know how that goes for you.

      Barjam

    9. Re:Audiophile BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who give a crap about 1 ohm.. if you used EFFICIENT speakers you dont need to resort to lame tricks like that.

      Anyone that set's up their stereo at less than 2 ohms at the lower extreme is a complete idiot. 4 is plenty and gives you some really good efficiency..

      Oh and dont even try to give me crap about SPL... SPL people are some of the stupidest people around.. Look, I can kill people with my stereo, Isn't it great! I cant even listen to it!

      man I rule! next I'm gonna go get 12 inch deep dished rims and put extenders on them so they stic kway out too!!!

      Audiophiles = idiots.

    10. Re:Audiophile BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      audiophiles=nazis

      actually their wurse than that

      audiophiles=just plain ignorant

    11. Re:Audiophile BS by NomNet · · Score: 1

      That's nothing - I remember reading a review of a Philips stand-alone digital Audio CD Recorder in a Hi-Fi magazine. They gave it 4 stars (out of 5), and the guy stated that "the recorded CDs sounded almost as good as the originals, just losing a bit of the warmth". I don't think he knew that a digital copy is identical to the original :) :)

  107. Right on by ragnarok · · Score: 1

    I was just reading through this article and I realized what a bunch of losers the /. crowd really is. What I'm curious about is if this spec is really better than the old cd spec, and I figured someone would discuss it here. But no, everybody whines about watermarking taking away their right to steal copyrighted material.

    losers, I'm going back to k5

    --
    Search first, ask questions later.
  108. I'm not sure how this is related by io333 · · Score: 1

    but i think it must be related somehow:

    Eight years ago I bought some sony headphones. They sounded great at the time, and probably still would now. However, last year, for no reason, the plastic the headphones are made from turned to goo. I'm not kidding. Those of you that bought Sony headphones long ago know what I'm talking about.

  109. I like SACD's! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have a SACD player, cost me $139 and also plays CD's and DVD's. The SACD sound quality is a lot better than CD, even my more expensive CD player does not sound as good as the $139 Sony playing SACD. You need a pretty good system to hear all that SACD is capable of, but I'm glad I can get this level of quality sound. There is still a CD layer, and this works just like a regular CD. The SACD sound can be copied via analog methods, but it won't sound quite as good. And if you copy the CD layer you get CD quality sound, which is fine for making MP3's. So those of us who want a really high quality medium get that, and I for one am not at all upset that I can't copy it. I'm just glad to have the opportunity to purchase something of this quality. If I really want a copy to play in the car I can just copy the CD layer and that perfecly good enough. I think the rumors that the CD layer is somehow degraded compared to a normal CD are bogus. On my system the CD layer sounds as good as any other CD. It's just that the SACD layer sounds even better.

  110. No whining: High quality A2D is now cheap by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

    High quality A2D convsion to redbook is hard - you've got to oversample, sample at a higher bit depth, do digital filtering and dithering. At least this has to happen at SOME level, maybe hidden in a chip. But the quality of chips, electronics and processing power has gone so far past what's necessary to do this that everyone who reads slash dot could get a cheap setup that does all this. So we never have to worry that going to analog and back is going to mess up our sound again. Therefore disk watermarks can be completely ignored as basically irrelevent.

    Rocky J. Squirrel

  111. Both photo's look the same to me? by Dr_Marvin_Monroe · · Score: 1, Troll
    Is this how the difference between SACD and regular CD works?

    Both photo's explain EXACTLY how the new system works. In fact, when I clicked on the first link, I fully expected to be sent to the second link!......Now that's truth in advertising!.

  112. MOD UP! by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

    It was rumoured Senator Fritz's infamous cpbpta or whatever its called is being implemented in small patched. This is one of them. Before you know it it will not only be a felony or federal crime to disable it but rather be a crime of federal maximum pound me in the ass prison for not using it. Oh and only Windows can do it so its maximum prison for using linux.

  113. Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 5, Informative

    >Everyone with any knowledge of audio will agree that CDs are
    >a poor format. Crappy error-correction, only 16-bit precision
    >(20 is optimal), and a relatively low sampling rate are all
    >problems. Guess why audiophiles mostly listen to vinyl.

    Amazing how much you can get wrong in three little sentences. CDs are a fantastic audio delivery format when compared to their predecessors. CD error protection is fairly bulletproof - witness the ability of most quality (and many cheap) players to track even severely scratched discs, while inaudibly correcting for any read errors the optics can't get past. Try doing that with a scratched analog LP or jammed tape. CD's 44.1 kHz sampling rate meanwhile is adequate to reproduce the full 20 Hz - 20 kHz range of human hearing, and then some (this article explains how the oddball 44.1 kHz became the standard).

    As for "audiophiles", I don't know how you'd possibly go about defining an audiophile these days, now that many low end consumer multichannel receivers and surround speaker systems boast specs that demolish those possessed by high-end, $1000+ pieces of equipment just a decade ago. I do know there are plenty of self-identified audiophiles out there who won't touch vinyl with a 10 foot pole. Given the format's numerous limitations, I can't say I blame them:

    * Loud tics and pops caused by stray dust and wear, resulting in a *negative* signal to noise ratio - i.e. the noise can become louder than the music! (with N'Stynk, I suppose this would be a blessing in disguise . . . or simply redundant.)
    * Rumbling caused by the turntable's motor and the friction of the stylus as it passes through the groove
    * Wow and flutter, caused by speed irregularities in the turntable's drive system and by any imperfections in the geometry of the disc
    * Phase irregularities caused by the RIAA equalization and the subsequent need for the preamp to de-equalize the signal
    * Frequency response irregularities caused by the RIAA equalization / de-equalization process
    * The inability to reproduce loud bass accurately (the cutter making the wax master would pop out of its groove if it tried to reproduce the kind of bass CDs can handle effortlessly)
    * The tendency for the turntable, platter and even the disc to function as microphones, picking up room reverberations and - particularly - the sound being produced by the speakers, smearing and distorting the audio in numerous ways
    * Cartridge / tonearm misalignments, causing inaccurate stylus pickup, accelerated record wear, or both.
    30dB of stereo separation, vs. CD's 70+dB of separation
    * A theoretical maximum of 60dB of dynamic range for virgin vinyl of the highest quality (and only at certain frequencies - obviously, not in the low bass) vs. around 90dB of dynamic range from even the cheapest CD players, across the entire spectrum
    * In practice, roughly 40dB of usable dynamic range across the majority of the spectrum
    * A relatively flat frequency response from only around 60 Hz to 15 kHz, with severe rolloffs beyond those limits
    * The need for mastering engineers to severely compress and re-equalize the signal in order to steer clear of the format's limitations relative to CD, which requires no such distortion-educing compensation
    * Pitch and frequency errors caused by the speed difference between the cutter used to produce the wax master and your turntable
    * The tendency of the media itself to wear out as its played, and to be damaged during routine handling with audible results

    CDs are based on 25 year old technology now. Newer formats - such as DVD Audio - offer even more impressive specifications (and multichannel audio capabilities), but the difference between them and the Compact Disc is nothing like the quantum leap in fidelity the CD represents vs. the vinyl LP. Vinyl was obsolete for at least a decade before the CD rolled along, and it was probably only confusion in the marketplace regarding the various tape formats (the 8-track, Philips' compact cassette, open reel) that allowed it to survive as long as it did.

    1. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by StillAnonymous · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the very informative post. I'd give it a +5 if I could. EVERY "vinyl is better" fanatic should read this.

      Honestly, the only reason I can see anyone preferring vinyl is for the nostalgic value. If you grew up listening to Deep Purple (or whatever) on vinyl and became accustomed to the colouring that you got from the phonograph and tube-amp combo, then you're likely to prefer it no matter what technical specs or other people say. I just wish these folks would admit that instead of just repeating the "vinyl is superiour" line everytime.

    2. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      >Thank you for the very informative post. I'd give it a +5 if I could.
      >EVERY "vinyl is better" fanatic should read this.

      Thanks! Glad you found it to be of some use.

      Actually, I can think of several reasons for preferring the "sound" of vinyl, but none of them have to do with its superior *fidelity*:

      * The dynamic range is compressed, sometimes pretty severely at certain frequencies. This can make it easier to hear certain soft details that might be obscure on a CD, particularly if your hearing isn't perfect (and most Americans have pretty poor hearing, due to all the loud noises we're exposed to during our lifetimes, particularly amplified music). For example, I've heard vinyl lovers say they've been able to hear the air conditioning in a concert hall from a quality, virgin vinyl pressing on a high-end turntable. While such feats are possible with CDs (if you crank the volume during a quiet passage - CD's 90dB dynamic range makes it possible to hear all sorts of otherwise inaudible background noise if you crank the volume high enough), it's simply impossible with vinyl's 60dB of dynamic range (max) unless the material was compressed before being mastered. (Well, I suppose if the concert hall had an amazingly noisy air conditioning system . . . .)
      * The music is typically heavily equalized by the mastering engineer. Not only do these guys compensate for the limits of the vinyl format (for example, eliminating any loud low bass that could pop the mastering cutter right out of its groove - not to mention your poor stylus), they frequently "sweeten" the sound to suit their own tastes.
      * The high end hiss, high-frequency clicks and pops and high-frequency harmonics generated by the stylus and pickup as they vibrate enhance the perceived high-midrange and treble response. While the hiss and clicks can be annoying when the music is soft, when it's loud the music pretty well drowns them out as distinct entities, and your ear perceives them as part of the high-end of the music. Harmonics also increase as the music grows louder, further enhancing the apparent high-end. I suspect this accounts for why many vinyl enthusiasts say CDs sound "flat" to them. They do!

      You can demonstrate this effect for yourself - generate or record some white noise extending out to at least 20kHz, then filter everything below about 5000 Hz by around 20dB. Finally, mix this in with some audio recorded off of CD (make it a CD that you own, in order to avoid the wrath of the RIAA!). Experiment with the levels until you find you can no longer hear the hiss as a distinct component of the overall sound during the louder passages of the song. Finally, compare the original to the "hissy" version. You'll find that the original sounds dull in comparison, with a flat high end. This is one of the reasons why audio cassettes sounded so flat when you used Dolby noise reduction. People thought the Dolby killed the high frequency response of the tapes. While Dolby did dull the high end a little bit, that wasn't responsible for most of the perceived reduction. All that hiss on cassettes made it sound like there was more high frequency signal recorded on the tape than was actually present, and when that noise was squashed, the sound was very dull compared to a cassette without noise reduction. Of course, the loud hiss was so annoying in the softer passages, most people were willing to put up with the perceived high frequency reduction in trade for effective hiss mitigation.

      Unfortunately for certain overly-enthusiastic vinyl lovers, CDs sound more like the original master tapes than vinyl, and that's the true meaning of fidelity. Folks may prefer the sound of a low-fidelity medium for any number of reasons, and that's their business. But trying to pass off a medium with inherently poor fidelity as somehow superior to a higher-fidelity medium is just wrong.

    3. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, vinyl is more vulnerable to errors than CD's

      Yes, vinyl has a substantially worse S/N ratio and channel seperation than CD.

      However, the timbre of the musical instruments in vinyl is subjectively superior (to my ears and many other peoples) to that of CDs.

      This is due to digital nature of CDs. The waveform produced from a CD is interpolated from data per unit of time. This is not as precise as the waveform produced from a vinyl record which doesn't require D/A interpolation.

      Also, while the ear hears pitch from roughly 20Hz to 20kHz, the ear perceives sound of much higher frequencies, not as pitch, but as directional encoding.

      CD's clip the frequency envelope hard at 20kHz, losing the directional encoding. Granted, most analog audio equipment isn't really designed to capture and reproduce sound above 20kHz, I would argue some does slip through the analog filters.

      Also, high frequencies that contain this directional encoding constuctively and destructively interfere with frequencies in the 20Hz to 20kHz band and are encoded somewhat inband as adjustments to timbre.

      The D/A interpolation performed by CD's will smooth out some of this information, while analog vinyl will encode it as is.

      In summation, the superior S/N ratio, channel separation, and decreased vulnerablity to reproduction errors of CD's are not as important as the superior timbre and staging provided by vinyl.

    4. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 5, Informative

      >The timbre of the musical instruments in vinyl is subjectively superior (to my ears and many other peoples) to that of CDs.

      Yes, I have no doubt it is - for reasons I cited in my posts. This has nothing to do with the fidelity offered by the vinyl LP format however, which is absolute rubbish compared to the Compact Disc's. The LP is 1940's technology, so this is hardly surprising.

      >This is due to digital nature of CDs. The waveform produced from a CD
      >is interpolated from data per unit of time. This is not as precise as the
      >waveform produced from a vinyl record which doesn't require D/A interpolation.

      What you've just said makes absolutely no sense. CDs record samples of sound over 44 thousand times *per-second*. The human ear has no way to discern the difference between audio sampled at such a high rate and a "continuous" analog waveform. Numerous A/B tests have been conducted, and participants have been consistently shown to be unable to tell the difference between an analog master tape and a well-made digital copy. Many of the earliest A/D and D/A converters were plagued with conversion issues and other performance limitations twenty years ago, but those have all been resolved now for well over a decade.

      Arguing that the resulting analog waveform produced by a CD player's D/A converters is not as "precise" as the analog waveform produced from a vinyl record is laughable. The signal being recorded on the vinyl has already been subjected to processing not required for transcription onto CD, including at least two equalization passes (one to compensate for vinyl's physical limitations regarding low bass and other frequency response issues, and another to make it conform to the standardized RIAA equalization curve) and dynamic range compression (in order to compensate for vinyl's limited dynamic range relative to the studio master tapes and CD, not to mention all the noise discs typically accumulate as they're used, plus the noise generated by the turntable and stylus). The equalization and compression alone cause all sorts of phase issues, plus harmonic distortion, and they compromise the flatness of the overall frequency response. On top of that, throw in the physical imperfection of the disc itself, wow and flutter and speed irregularities both for the cutter and for your turntable, plus turntable, platter and disc resonance effects and any electrical hum being picked up by your cartridge and phono preamp . . . well, it's plain to see the waveform coming off even the best turntable is going to be a heck of a lot less precise than the waveform coming off a well-made CD. You may prefer the sound of the LP for whatever reason, but there's no way on earth you can back up the assertion that it's more "precise".

      >Also, while the ear hears pitch from roughly 20Hz to 20kHz, the ear perceives
      >sound of much higher frequencies, not as pitch, but as directional encoding.

      Again, this simply isn't true. Young children can hear out to 20kHz, and occasionally even beyond (I think the observed limit is around 22-24kHz - CDs top out at a theoretical maximum of 22kHz, but due to the nature of PCM encoding at 44.1kHz, filters have to be put into place to limit high-frequency sound much beyond 20kHz), but it's vital to note that even then, the sensitivity of our ears to sound at 20kHz is extraordinarily low. In other words, a sound at 20kHz would have to be phenomenally loud for us to hear it compared to a sound at, say, 5,000Hz, where our hearing is much, much more sensitive. Few musical instruments produce loud sounds at or above 20kHz as a result - at least, not intentionally. There could be harmonics at frequencies in excess of 20kHz (for example, perhaps cymbals produce such harmonics), but by their very nature, those harmonics are going to be soft in relation to the rest of the signal - and again, most adults don't stand a snowball's chance of hearing them anyhow, even if they were deafeningly loud, which they're not.

      Worse, vinyl doesn't stand a snowball's chance of reproducing such ultrasonic information with any kind of accuracy. The format was never designed to record high frequency signals - engineers have enough trouble squeezing 60Hz - 15,000Hz out of them reliably, let alone with any kind of fidelity when compared to CDs. I have no doubt that LPs produce a fair amount of ultrasonic signal, but again, most of that is going to be unintentional - clicks and pops, surface noise, electrical noise, and harmonic distortion generated by the stylus and cartridge as they vibrate. Any "real" ultrasonic information on the record would be swamped by all the fake ultrasonic garbage. You also seem to be assuming that the master tapes contain such ultrasonic information. They don't. The usable frequency response of even the best analog tape decks used historically for studio recording typically topped out at around 25kHz. Beyond that the levels fall off so rapidly as to be useless, and even there, the levels are going to be pretty low (assuming the deck doesn't employ filtering beyond around 22kHz to eliminate unwanted ultrasonic noise that can impinge on the bias signal).

      Of course, this assumes the microphones could even pick up such ultrasonics to begin with, which of course they can't. 99.9% of the microphones used over the past 60 years to record audio in the studio or concert hall are lucky to have a usable frequency response out to as far as 20kHz - most begin a pretty severe rolloff at 15kHz, and by 20kHz only a handful manage to maintain a flat response, with performance dropping off rapidly thereafter. Anything they're picking up beyond 20kHz is going to be so faint as to be inaudible once it passes through the gauntlet of noise and distortion inherent in the vinyl format. Here's a sales listing for the legendary Neumann U87, a mic that's been the studio standard for vocal recording since the '60s - the Beatles used this mic, and singers & engineers continue to choose this mic over all others even to this day. Its frequency response tops out at 20kHz. So much for recording ultrasonics. And the instrument probably most likely to produce ultrasonics - the cymbal - is typically recorded using a mic like the Shure SM57, which has been a standard for recording percussion since its introduction over thirty years ago. Its frequency response tops out at a measly 15kHz. What ultrasonics?

      Of course, it's all utterly inconsequential compared to the trashing of the original waveform caused by all of vinyl's other numerous limitations, including the damage done in the crucial 50Hz-5,000Hz range where human hearing and perception is so much more sensitive, and accuracy therefore so much more important.

      >In summation, the superior S/N ratio, channel separation, and decreased
      >vulnerablity to reproduction errors of CD's are not as important as the
      >superior timbre and staging provided by vinyl.

      In summation, you're clearly uninformed from a technical standpoint. If you prefer the "sound" of vinyl, that's your business. But don't try to cloak your preference in technobabble you clearly don't begin to understand.

    5. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by brianvan · · Score: 2

      Yowza! The audio god is here - kicking ass and taking names!

      Your audio knowledge is quite impressive. I'm curious as to what you do for a living/hobby from which you have learned all of this very in-depth knowledge about audio and formats. (The easy answer is that you're an audio engineer in a studio, but you may be in another field altogether...)

    6. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by tempfile · · Score: 1

      Vinyl: No copy protection, no encryption, no way at all of limiting my fair use. Case closed. I try to get every album released in crippled, er, copy-protected form on vinyl.

    7. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sgage · · Score: 1

      I am curious as to how much post-D/A-conversion "coloring" done in CD players, intentionally or not. Any comments?

    8. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I've been "into" home audio as a hobby since I fixed my uncle's broken Magnavox turntable when I was 5. That same uncle had a friend when I was in high school who was a big audiophile - he was invited by Rockford Fosgate to go to the 1985 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, and I got to tag along. It was like being a kid in a candy store (literally, I suppose!). I used to look at catalogs and visit the local audiophile shops whenever I got a chance. I even subscribed to the late, lamented Stereo Review for over half a decade - longer than I've ever subscribed to any other magazine - and graduated from college with a degree in broadcasting (though I now perform business intelligence work - no oxymoron jokes, please).

      My own stereo system is very modest, though. I'm far more interested in bang for the buck, and am far too cheap to blow more than $500 on any single piece of equipment (I'd have to win the lottery first). I've seen so-called audiophiles spend thousands on crap I wouldn't donate to the Salvation Army. Ultimately, it's about the music for me - not the technology. And I have no need to show off with my money, unlike a lot of rich idiots out there who must have 2" peckers.

      My knowledge isn't so impressive - I know just enough to find more detailed information on the Internet (a legacy of my business intelligence background I suppose - dig through the database for more relevant information). For example, I knew the microphone the Beatles used is still in heavy use today for vocal recording, but couldn't remember its name. Once I tracked its name down, it was easy to get the specs on it, and confirm a couple of hunches I had, based on my past experience shopping for a microphone - namely, that mics with anything like a usable frequency response out to 20kHz are rare as hen's teeth and hellishly expensive, and that the most commonly-used studio mics are physically incapable of recording the vinyl-fanatics' much-cited "ultrasonic information".

      The Internet can be a great tool for debunking junk science, marketing spin and urban myths, if you're willing to expend a little effort. Unfortunately, it can also be a great tool for spreading them, with little effort . . .

    9. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      Very little "coloring" is being done by modern CD players I'd imagine, except the unintentional limitations of lower-end players (cheaper amps, poorly isolated circuitry - that kind of thing).

      It's pretty trivial to test the frequency response accuracy of a CD player, since test discs are so easy to produce. Slap in a disc full of white noise and look at the frequency response curve on a scope or a computer. If it's not pretty much ruler flat from 20-20,000Hz, "Houston, we have a problem."

      There have been CD players produced with tube amps in them. I'm certain those color the sound somewhat.

      Of course, with more and more people using DVD players as CD players, connected to an amp over digital coaxial or optical cables, maybe we should all be more concerned about what's going on in the amp! Players are rapidly being reduced to nothing more than transport mechanisms in the mass market, particularly in the increasingly common home theater setups. Fortunately, a lot of these multichannel amps seem to have pretty robust D/A circuitry, for consumer gear. I'm guessing that's because so many of their signals get routed through it, and because the cost of quality D/A converters is a much smaller percentage of the cost of a multichannel amp than it is of a DVD or CD player, where the transports themselves are dirt cheap now.

    10. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by nattt · · Score: 1

      Not all "audiophiles" listen to vinyl because it is "technically superior".

      Music used to be mastered, with the engineer knowing that it was going to be played on a record player. The engineer would "compensate" for the problems of vinyl in his mix, and the LP would be the definitive statement of what they wanted the music to sound like. Playing it back on any other media may be more "accurate", but it's not what was intended.

      I play vinyl because I refuse to re-buy everything on CD. I have a very good record player that doesn't rumble, wow or flutter and a valve (tube) and horn system that makes music fun to listen to. Who cares about accuracy when you're enjoying what you're listening to. Hell - it can even make bad CD's sound a little better than an "accurate" system.

      Does SACD make music more fun, more enjoyable? No. It sounds pretty much the same as CD - I don't think anyone could tell them apart in a blind test. And a 1 bit system is a complete waste of disc space. DVD-A stores a lot more audio information than SACD, but even that is redundant because you can't hear it. Both formats move any filters well away from the audio range, which are the real cause of "digitalitis" - bad digital sound.

      Music and Audio is about enjoying music, not matter what the genre or vintage. Any media that enhances enjoyment is good - and copy protection and watermarking spoil that enjoyment wether in an audio sense or a philosophical one.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    11. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by zimbu · · Score: 2, Funny

      2" peckers

      Are those speakers between woofers and tweeters???

    12. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For what it's worth, I have personally done some frequency range testing using my fancy HP audio signal generator and a set of headphones supposedly good to 21kHz.

      My hearing (I'm 35) drops off dramatically above 14 kHz. My daughter (age 4) got as high as 17 kHz before losing it, but that was at pretty darned high volume levels.

      Most people really don't understand how high pitched 22 kHz really is: as a point of reference, a North American TV's flyback frequency is 15 kHz and is typically quite loud: if you can't hear that clearly and effortlessly then you certainly needn't worry about the 22 kHz "limit" of CDs.

      And the people who rant about "digital staircasing" as an absolute joke. Since they can't comprehend the concept of Nyquist limits, the easiest solution for them is to just hook up an oscilloscope across the speaker terminals and challenge them to point out the staircasing: guess what, there isn't any. And if there was, your tweeter sure as hell wouldn't be able to reproduce it.

    13. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .. glad to know I haven't damaged my hearing much.. yet.

      I can hear if a TV is on in the house from any room usually (and I mean by the flyback, not because the volume is up really loud).

    14. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great stuff, you really know what you're talking about there. Unfortunately it doesn't explain why, in my living room, my fine turntable often sounds better than my fine CD player, often putting instruments in the room where the CD player plasters everything against the back wall.

    15. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's not damage, it's just age. You won't find anybody over 40 who can still hear flyback whine.

      I spoke with a TV technician once, who said that one of the things they look forward to with getting older is no longer hearing that annoying flyback squeal in the shop all day.

    16. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not registered here so i can't mod you up...but damn that was funny!

    17. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      I thought I'd explained that thoroughly - signals on vinyl are typically highly compressed, which can help emphasize fainter sounds (including a lot of spatial information) that would not be so readily apparent on a non-compressed CD or original masters, and vinyl injects all kind of artificial high frequency junk into the signal (hiss, clicks & pops, harmonic distortion, phase errors, equalization errors, etc.) that will also be perceived by the ear as a "spacious" sound by its very nature.

    18. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      >Music used to be mastered, with the engineer knowing that it
      >was going to be played on a record player. The engineer would
      >"compensate" for the problems of vinyl in his mix, and the LP
      >would be the definitive statement of what they wanted the music
      >to sound like. Playing it back on any other media may be more
      >"accurate", but it's not what was intended.

      That would be true if the CD's were being burned from the LP masters, and if the guys who produced the LP masters were the same guys who produced the original studio masters. In reality, except for some early releases in the 1980's, during the period when the record companies were just shoveling stuff onto CD, few CD's have been made from the vinyl masters, and the guys who produced those old vinyl masters were seldom if ever the original studio recording engineers and producers.

      The mastering engineers were extraordinarily talented and incredibly experienced, so I have no doubt they helped to enhance or "sweeten" the sound of poorly produced studio masters from time to time as they produced the final vinyl masters, going above and beyond what was needed to prep the tapes for transfer to vinyl.

      It's hardly surprising that some original masters didn't sound all that great, even taking into consideration the limits of the technology at the time - a lot of the early recording engineers had technical backgrounds, and didn't know much at all about music or how live music should sound. But some of those engineers and producers did have a background in music and certainly knew what they were doing. CD reissues of their work sound spectacular - better, and far more musical, than much of the stuff being recorded today.

      Bones Howe's work would be a good example. I recently received a copy of the '58 Bing Crosby / Rosemary Clooney recording Fancy Meeting You Here on Bluebird's 2001 CD reissue. The recording was engineered by legendary engineer (later producer) Howe. It sounds phenomenal. Instruments and the singers' vocals pop out into the room, and the record is characterized by a warm, rich sound. While it occasionally bumps into the obvious limits of the recording technology of the day, there's also impressive high end extension and incredible bass performance for a nearly 45-year-old recording. I'm sure the engineer on the remastering, Michael Drexler, probably also did his bit to sweeten the sound and compensate for any deterioration in the original master.

      The most successful act produced by Bones Howe was the 5th Dimension. I recently picked up an el cheapo 5th Dimension greatest hits package put out by Arista in 1999 called Master Hits. Howe apparently hung on to the original masters for thirty some odd years, having left the record company only with their copies. The originals finally got the full 24-bit remastering treatment, and sound absolutely incredible. Sure, there are more than traces of tape hiss in these recordings, but the frequency response and the imaging on these recordings is phenomenal. I'd always partially dismissed a lot of the group's work as hopelessly coy pop fluff, and I suppose it still is, but these remastered recordings allow me to see the group in a whole new light. What they were doing was technically and musically years ahead of its time - I can't recall many other pop recordings with such a lush, natural, musical (in spite of all the production) sound. The effect is almost symphonic. And this was all recorded in the mid to late '60s and early '70s, years before audiophile pop standards like the Steely Dan records of the late '70s.

      So yeah, some vinyl mastering engineers might have enhanced the work of poor recording engineers as part of the transfer process, but so what? Most popular older recordings have been or are being re-released on CD in newly remastered editions, and you can bet that many mastering engineers are going to go beyond employing every trick in the book merely to correct for any defects or deterioration in the masters, and will instead use their talents to enhance the sound of poorly produced masters. For example, I suspect the recently reissued Blondie CDs are one such example of revisionism. Their Autoamerican disc never sounded that good before, on LP or CD. "Rapture", with its Tom Scott horns, now has a hall of mirrors ambience you can almost literally get lost in. Whoever was in charge of these remasters did a fantastic job of enhancing their sound. Everything sounds perfectly natural - indeed, more natural than any earlier release (including DCC's audiophile gold disc of Parallel Lines issued a few years back, which was a huge disappointment compared to their stunning reissue of Joni Mitchell's Court And Spark) - but also much better, with a soundstage and a sense of presence that was utterly lacking before on most Blondie recordings.

      I'm not necessarily sure how I feel about such revisionism, but it's always been a part of the recording chain, and at least with CD you stand a good chance of getting the recording off the disc in exactly the form the mastering engineer left it there. With vinyl, that's simply impossible.

      >I have a very good record player that doesn't rumble, wow or flutter

      That's also impossible. All turntables suffer from some rumble, wow and flutter, and no vinyl disc is geometrically perfect.

      >I play vinyl because I refuse to re-buy everything on CD.

      That's a very valid reason for preferring vinyl!

      >And a 1 bit system is a complete waste of disc space. DVD-A
      >stores a lot more audio information than SACD, but even that
      >is redundant because you can't hear it. Both formats move any
      >filters well away from the audio range, which are the real cause
      >of "digitalitis" - bad digital sound.

      These are all extremely valid points. "Bitstream" formats like SACD are essentially storing the kind of single-bit stream that the much utilized 1-bit D/A converters found in many CD players produce. There are advantages to doing this - namely, the expensive machines used in studios can do a better job encoding audio in this fashion than the far cheaper D/A converters employed in consumer equipment. But there are, as you pointed out, disadvantages too. A DVD-A using PCM will actually encode more audio information than is present on a SACD, from what I've read. The problem of course is when it comes to converting it back to the analog domain - can the latest generation of home D/A converters do a better job? Of course, as you rightly point out, you can't hear that redundant information anyhow - assuming any of it was present on the recording to begin with, which is highly unlikely since microphones can't pick up that ultrasonic stuff.

      Early CD players were plagued with poor brick wall filters that led to slightly degraded sound quality, especially at the extreme high end (of course, many people can't hear anything up there, anyhow). But that hasn't been a real issue now for over a decade and anyhow, vinyl utilizes similar extreme filtering in the RIAA equilization / de-equilization process, over the entire audio spectrum - not just at the extreme high end. Any sins potentially being committed by CD players due to their extreme high-end filters are also being committed on vinyl, at pretty much every frequency, including smack dab in the middle of the most sensitive range of human hearing from around 80Hz - 5,000Hz. It's one of the main culprits behind "vinylitis" - bad vinyl sound.

    19. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by nattt · · Score: 1

      >>I have a very good record player that doesn't rumble, wow or flutter

      >That's also impossible. All turntables suffer from some rumble, wow and flutter, and no vinyl disc is geometrically perfect.

      I should have said "doesn't audibly rumble, wow or flutter". I don't hear these while listening to music (or even test discs), so they don't impinge on my musical enjoyment.

      The digital reconstruction filters on CD's have the problem where you get both pre and post ringing, which is not something that the RIAA curve filters in record replay can achieve. Some people have experimented commercially with CD players that either don't have a filter, or have filters that don't exhibit pre-ringing, or have it reduced to a much greater degree than others.

      If there is any benefit to DVD-A and SACD, it's that the mastering equipment has to be a much higher standard than CD, and that there's a lot more headroom in the format to cope with the problems of mixing, recording and mastering. They leave more room for errors, whereas the CD format didn't leave much room at all. Because of the higher sampling frequency, you can shove the filters up to a frequency where you can't hear them, and any pre-ringing is reduced in time. These can only be good things.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    20. Re:Vinyl "Fidelity" by EaTiN+cOfFeE+bEaNs · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but with the oil embargo of the late 1970's, vinyl was cut thinner and decreased sound quality? Isn't that one of the big reasons for the rise of tapes and CD's?

      --
      No TiVo and no caffeine make me something something...
  114. Who Remembers Quadraphonic LPs? by bedouin · · Score: 1

    Just from browsing the FAQ, the main advantage over current CD's, at least in the /average/ consumer's eyes seems to be more than two channels. There's definitely an imrpovement in sound, but not one drastic as say, the jump from analog tape to CDs.

    In the early 70's Quadraphonic vinyl was released, which was backward compatible with stereo styli -- and it never caught on because it required hardware upgrades, and presented no real clear advantage over standard LPs; this seems to be a similar concept.

    Besides, $30 for a disc? No thanks.

  115. Good by pimpinmonk · · Score: 1

    Good, now the music I feel is good enough to buy will sound better. All you software developers quit yer yackin, cuz you guys prolly hate piracy just as much. The fact of the matter is, everyone steals everything, be it music, software, or wheels of cheese, but the economy doesn't collapse because people still buy the products they strongly like.

  116. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Robber+Baron · · Score: 2

    Well shit...then I'll really have to wait for someone to rip a new release before I listen to it because there's no way in hell I'll be buying one of these SADCD players!

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

  117. Giving up on the CD/MP3 format. by InnovATIONS · · Score: 1

    The record comanies used to grumble about home taping onto cassette tapes. That grumbling disappeared when it became clear that such home tapes were vastly inferior to the new CDs that everyone was raving about. Then burning CDs and a reasonable sized compresed verion of the same, MP3, became available and all that changed. So maybe what sony is saying is...let them have their CDs and their MP3s. We can't stop them. Instead let them come to us because we will offer this vastly superior format that they can't make themselves. Trying to impose some sort of DRM solution on top of CDs and MP3s is a problem because you wind up breaking backward compatibility in the process. On the other hand create a new and superior format with DRM built into it at the start and you can mbake it solid. So I think that this is the beginning of having mp3s fall into the same level of worry from the RIAA as making cassette tapes from radio broadcasts.

  118. great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    now i think i'll just hook the headphone jack to my audigy card, and record it to regular cd and play my legal backup that way.

  119. Re:Its not as bad as IBM using pallidium secretly by cosmosis · · Score: 2

    me too - people mod this up!!

  120. Some audiophiles are not wealthy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is a popular misconception. I know a few of my college buddies who are audiophiles. A good sounding system does not have to cost obscenely large amounts of money. On the other hand what is needed is a love of music and the patience to actually listen and compare different (affordable)equipment before buying. The patience to carefully setup that equipment is also crucial.

    I started out by buying used gear and I didn't spend very much money on equipment, but I got much more realistic sound than most people spending the same amount of money.

    By the way SACD players are available for $150, and they are also very good CD players to boot. One cannot go wrong with even the cheapest SACD models today.

  121. It's not secret and they run Linux fine by blp · · Score: 4, Informative
    I have a brand new IBM ThinkPad T30 with a TCPA chip, and I have been running Debian GNU/Linux on it from day one. In fact, the Microsoft OS it came with has never been booted. If I could just get ATI to give me specs on the video card, so that I could make suspend/resume work better, I'd be entirely satisfied with it.

    Now, this is not to say that TCPA does not have some unsettling implications. For now, TCPA-enabled machines can boot "trusted" or "untrusted" OSes. What worries me is what might happens years in the future, when TCPA or its moral equivalent is in just about every machine and "trusted" OSes are the exception, not the rule, on mainstream users' PCs (should that ever come to pass). At that point, I'll start getting worried about the possibility that manufacturers might turn off the ability to boot an untrusted OS.

    1. Re:It's not secret and they run Linux fine by fallen1 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      What worries me is what might happens years in the future, when TCPA or its moral equivalent is in just about every machine and "trusted" OSes are the exception, not the rule, on mainstream users' PCs (should that ever come to pass). At that point, I'll start getting worried about the possibility that manufacturers might turn off the ability to boot an untrusted OS. (Bold emphasis mine)

      Umm, at that point getting worried will do you no good as you have waited beyond the event horizon and are already sucked into the black hole of TCPA and DRM and your untrusted OS will be cut off as surely as you draw breath. The time to worry is NOW, not after the event that precipitates matters into "OH SHIT, I've got to do something before ..." and then you realize the "before" has already happened and the shit has hit the fan. Wake up people!! ACT, do not REACT, to what corps and governments are doing and trying to do. If all you do is react you have almost always lost.

      --

      Dream as if you'll live forever.
      Live as if you'll die tomorrow.
      ~Anonymous~

  122. Huh? by jonr · · Score: 2

    Region-locked DVD players have never sold very well here. For a long time, sellers haven't even dreamt about selling region-locked DVD players. After all, I live in the middle of the Atlantic, what region should I use? :)

  123. Scary Thought by Llywelyn · · Score: 2

    Okay, so SACD players won't read non-watermarked discs such as CD-Rs. This sounds okay on the outset, but think about it for a moment.

    (fictional scenario)
    I have my own startup band, we burn and distribute our own CDs. Suddenly, I *must* go through the RIAA if I want to distribute my music.

    This is bad bad news if it is true.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    1. Re:Scary Thought by kuyttendaele · · Score: 1

      Only SACDs contain a watermark.
      Current 'normal' CD don't include a watermark though they can be played on a SACDplayer

      Karel

  124. What's the problem? by The_Steel_General · · Score: 1
    Let me be sure that I'm clear, here:

    Sony and Philips come out with music technology that samples 64 times more than CDs, can hold almost two hours of stereo audio at that sampling rate [due to the data capacity of the physical media], can be played on players that also play CDs, can even be used as hybrid discs with CD-Audio, and this is A Bad Thing because there's actually [gasp] copyright protection on the discs?

    Did you really think you're going to rip 9 GIGABYTES of music directly onto your iPod? Since you're just going to compress it down to MP3 anyway, what's the point? Yes, a more pristine source means better output files, but at this level I can't imagine any sort of noticeable difference. And for the moment it sounds like they are more worried about market penetration than people ripping the data -- ref the CD layer, which should be just as rippable as ever.

    Sure, at some point they'll phase out the extra CD layer....although I can't imagine that will be soon. It's taken twenty years for CDs to become the primary method of music distribution, and vinyl is still around. But even if there are no more CDs out there, then we're back to...well, twenty years ago, making copies through the audio jacks or as directly as your stereo would allow. Slower and less digital, true, but then the source is presumably a lot better as well.

    This is GOOD! There's no DRM included,no region codes, no inherent assumption that customers are criminals, and nothing [ref DAT] to stop you from making as many copies as you want. Just not digitally.

    Yet.

    DVDs have been out for what, five years, now? and manufacturers are already flaunting region-free players. How long do you really think this copy-protection method will last past the point that customers find it annoying?

    And all of this is assuming that the format does well enough to put CDs permanently out to pasture before the patents on *this* technology expire. Heck, I'm just starting to get used to CDs, myself.

    IMHO, it's not worth worrying about.

    TSG

  125. Correction: sample rate should read by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    2.82 MHz. And of course, my illustration of a sin wav encoded in DSD doesn't take advantage of the greatly enhanced sample rate.

  126. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it will take a good 10-15 years for any new audio format to 'catch-on'. You may cite DVD video as a format that caught on in only 5 years, but I would submit that Audio formats are a whole different ball game. It took CD more than 10 years to finally outsell cassettes in the US (It happened in 1993 - if I remember correctly).

    So Sony/Philips will keep releasing music as Hybrid SACDs (both SACD and CD layer included) until that 'catching-on' occurs. Given that SACD players even today cost $150, I can't see why in 10 years it won't be acceptable to release new music in SACD only single layer format, given that all our current CD players will likely be dead.

  127. What about the poor starving artists? by IHateUniqueNicks · · Score: 1

    No, seriously.

    Music watermarks had two opponents

    But they seem to have forgotten about a third opponent of many of these schemes: Independant artists. Those that havn't sold their souls to the devil. What happens when they want to release high quality music?

    Do they have to pay the powers that be exorbiant amounts in order to get their music to fans at this quality? Or are they just turned down, and told to come back once they are owned by a label?

    Is it just me, or does this sound like illegal product tying? (Want to sell high quality music, sign up with us. Want to listen to this high quality music, buy our players. Want to use our players, buy our music)

  128. umm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "CD degrades the vinyl recording.
    If you know what you're doing it doesn't have to."

    Even then it does. CD quality is inherentily less than vinyl.

  129. Re:Most DACS can't decode PWM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, actually no DAC is needed with PWM or DSD. Another advantage of this format (aside with better resolution compared to CD) is that only a low-pass is needed to achieve to digital to analog conversion.

  130. Let me get this straight. by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 2

    Sony is producing audio players that, in addition to standard CDs, also play super-high-quality audio etched onto a second layer on the disc. These discs are also backwards-compatible with standard CDs and also contain audio in the 44 KHz/18 bit/stereo format we all know and love. The discs are watermarked in hardware and no one can play the high-quality audio without the watermark.

    Meanwhile, the MP3 file traders are passing around audio files encoded at 192kbps or less, notably inferior to the standard audio still encoded on these discs.

    So what's the reason for the new format? Does Sony plan on taking over the entire CD media, discontinuing the standard media layer and distributing SACD-only discs? I doubt they could manage it. Even if they did, the super-high-quality audio output, in analog, can still be resampled and MPEG'd.

    So what's the big deal?

  131. There is a limit to what the human ear can hear. by altgrr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    OK, so it's all very well that you can now use SACD with more accurate signal reproduction, or even DVD-A (isn't that a term used in porn movies? So I've heard) if you want better quality.

    Whose ears are actually good enough to listen to 24-bit audio and tell the difference between that and 16-bit anyway? I have often heard it said that analogue transmission of audio is far worse than digital. I don't entirely agree with that, but supposing it's true - surely the cables between SACD player and amplifier, amplifier and speakers are going to withdraw a lot of the benefits of the more accurate signal?

    Yes, we can only hear about 20-bit accuracy. The point of the additional accuracy is, therefore, questionable. The difference in quality it will make is miniscule. The LSB on 16-bit audio represents a variation of 0.0015% in the output signal. The LSB on 24-bit audio represents a variation of 0.000006% of the output signal. Can you hear that final bit? Does it make all the difference? Er, no.

    Those who say that the MP3 format is too lossy for them might be interested to know that audiophiles can't actually hear the difference between 256kbps MP3 and the original CD recording. Those who think they need still more quality should perhaps check out the MAD plugin which has the ability to decode mp3s to 24-bit, recreating bits that weren't even there in order to improve quality.

    As regards introducing watermarks as a kind of copy protection - well, that's just reducing the quality of the audio, which defeats the point of what you were trying to achieve in the first place.

    --


    Like car accidents, most hardware problems are due to driver error.
  132. Another reason for a new standard by Tyrell+Hawthorne · · Score: 1

    Now, I'm not 100% sure of this, but I've read that the patents for compact disc are running out. As it is now, every manufacturer needs to pay royalties to the patent owners (Sony and Philips) for every drive they make. They don't want to lose that revenue, so they make up a new standard. They only need to make it a commonplace standard like the CD - which might prove to be a difficult task... Arguing better sound quality is a bit hard considering how terribly crappy sound systems most people have.

  133. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Peer · · Score: 1

    The SACD logo can be seen as a 'S' and a 'P' for Sony and Philips when turned right. They both worked on it.

    From what I understand, the plan is to get all CD's to become SACD's asap. Then after you own about 25 of these disks you'll be more willing to buy a SACD-player. Or they might just start selling SACD-only disks.
    http://www.sacd.philips.com/http://www.sacd.philip s.com/b2b/technology/

  134. Cool. I'd take this over MANDATORY DRM any day by MrMeanie · · Score: 1

    This is a damn good idea. Sony can use the physical watermark to prevent piracy WITHOUT requiring that mandatory DRM be included in every piece of computer hardware and software. (Which would kill a large proportion of the software industry due to exhorbatant licensing costs)

    This is the future. I suggest that Hollywood and the music recording industry be encouraged to use solutions like this; this was they can be as restrictive as they like with respect to their content and the devices that play it (through licensing), without affecting PCs and the internet. I would suggest that the entertainment industry DISALLOW manufacturers from producing players that interface with PCs. After all, not many people will buy high quality SACDs only to put them thru a PC soundcard rather than a good HiFi, or buy a DVD to watch it on a PC monitor rather than a personal cinema.
    Just live with it: If a PCs can play MPAA/RIAA content, DRM will become mandatory. You can't have one without the other; MPAA/RIAA wont let you. I would suggest that the two be walled off from one another, to restrict the damage done to the computer industry.

    I don't know about the rest of you, but I would rather have a PC that cannot play music/movies (thus needing a separate HiFi and TV), and have no DRM, than find myself unable to use my PC the way I want to (I like to write and distribute open source software with my PC).

    Just remember, if you don't like the onerous DMCA style conditions attached to media like SACD / DVDs, just DON'T BUY THEM!!! (don't pirate them either; you'd just give the MPAA and the RIAA all the reason they need to convince the government to make DRM mandatory)

  135. play.com selling both SACD's and DVD-A's now by rklrkl · · Score: 1
    play.com are now selling both Super Audio CD's and DVD Audio CD's, but have seen the price of them ?! 17.99 pounds ($27) for SACD's and 12.99 pounds ($19) for DVD-A's, whereas if I go to CD WOW!, I can buy pretty well any normal audio CD for 8.99 pounds ($13). I guess I know where my money's heading then.

    Unless the price of SACD's comes down extremely rapidly, they will simply fail - you can't play them on normal CD players, they cost twice as much at the moment, they have some sort of DRM included and the range is very limited (looks like more back catalogue stuff than new stuff to me). It's like the pre-recorded Mini Disc (which still aren't cheaper than CD's !) debacle all over again...

  136. HDCD by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2
    I recently popped over to China where I noticed CDs labelled as being in HDCD format. I bought a CD just to see what it was all about. From the website (hdcd.com) :

    "HDCD-encoded CDs sound better because they are encoded with 20 bits of real musical information, as compared with 16 bits for all other CDs. HDCD overcomes the limitation of the 16-bit CD format by using a sophisticated system to encode the additional 4 bits onto the CD while remaining completely compatible with the existing CD format. HDCD provides more dynamic range, a more focused 3-D soundstage, and extremely natural vocal and musical timbre. With HDCD, you get the body, depth, and emotion of the original performance not a flat, digital imitation."

    So, you still need a special player to take advantage of the format, it is better that oridinary CDs, but inferior to Super Audio CDs, but at at least there doesn't seem to be anything to stop you from making your MP3s.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    1. Re:HDCD by Spyky · · Score: 2

      Interestingly enough, I everyone's favorite company, Microsoft, purchased the company who owns the patents for HDCD, Pacific Microsonics. So now if you purchse an HDCD disc or HDCD capable equipment, some royalty is going to MS.

      Check out Microsoft HDCD

      -Spyky

  137. DVD-Audio by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2

    The other next generation audio format appears to be DVD-Audio, as described by this FAQ

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  138. Prior art to DSD!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I *personally* used high-frequency, 1-bit digital sampling, for the purposes of recording and re-playing digital audio, many, MANY, years ago, (my first experiments were done using a couple of resistors, connected to the parallel port of a 286).

    What's more, I may even have proof of that, (video recordings, and friends who will back up my claim).

    Can I claim prior art, and invalidate the Sony patent?

    1. Re:Prior art to DSD!!! by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

      Any old PC game that generated sound other than simple beeps through the PC speaker was using 1-bit sampling (they just clicked the speaker on and off as fast as the 4.77MHz CPU would allow).

      The problem is, Sony's patents on DSD probably are more specific than just 1-bit sampling.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  139. Ill buy when.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They sell or make available all the seperate tracks on the disk so I can hear my 'own' mix - and I will pay more for these 'definitive' disks. I do not want somebody elses idea of the
    mix that should sell widely.

    Forget piracy - there is a better way to slow it. Have your hearing tested and profiled. Then register it with say Sony, tell them the disk you want to play, and based on your profile, they send a 'recommended' set of profiles, that make the most of individual tracks, boosted for selective hearing loss,and defined preferances much like hearing aids are 'tuned'.
    Bind this with a memory stick, and another for every radio/CD then you hear best, what you want to hear, without effort.

    Basically kill priracy by giving infinite mix varability, and 400 variations of the same 'hit' .

  140. Question.... by NTSwerver · · Score: 2

    From the FAQ: "SACDs, on the other hand, use DSD (Direct Stream Digital) high resolution coding. This samples the music at 64 times the rate of CD, or 2.8MHz

    So the sample rate of this new CD format is 2.8MHz. Correct me if I'm wrong, but these CD's will all be pressed from a DAT or other such digital master that would have been recorded at, at best, 96KHz. This makes a 2.8MHz sampling rate pretty redundant does it not?

    --
    -----------------------
    Moderator's essentials
    1. Re:Question.... by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Gives them headroom to increase the mastering capabilities, if nothing else.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  141. Some of the Sony DVD combo players CAN play SACD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    at full resolution so his story may be correct and he really did listen to an SACD multichannel disc.

    Of course, than there's this matter of which hi-rez format is better (SACD or DVD-A (even at 24/192 resolution))..

  142. Re:Its not as bad as IBM using pallidium secretly by guanxi · · Score: 1

    Seems like a strange choice by IBM: Much of their business strategy is built around Linux. They say they spent $1 billion on it last year (or this year?), and the executive that spearheaded their Linux strategy got promoted to CEO.

    Why would they stop people from installing Linux on their own hardware?

  143. Is this how they will do it then? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Ive been waiting for the 'new format' that will slowly push out 'open' formats in exchange for the DRM realm.

    Sort of like how 8Tracks were slowly phased out. not quite as sinister of a plan back then, but it was the same concept.. people will change their hardware when the old formats arent availble anylonger.

    True its a slow process, but in the end.. we get it in the end..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  144. I'm not sure this SACD is a bad thing BUT.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    its not clear that this SACD format has been created solely for the purpose of content protection, and i do expect it to sound better, and maybe Neil Young will finally release his last 6 albums on SACD ....

    People here are saying that well Sony is alientaing their customers by forcing them to buy this and in the story about the Palm with fewer colors, everyone is saying its a huge PR disaster, everyone is going to abandon Palm, etc.

    And i'm sure both companies will lose a few customers over these things. BUT for the most part, no one but us techies know or care about this. Until my parents put a SACD into their computer and Windows puts up a message that says "Format not recognized" or until they try to play a mp3 or CD made by some of their bluegrass playin' friends and get the message "This is an illegal bit of music and cannot be played" from their computer they will not know or care about the details of how the music they listen to is stored on a little shiney disc. Or how many colors a PDA has.

    Part of this is proof of its pointlessness...if you could not tell your PDA did not have 16 bit color then you were probably not viewing digitial images on it and dont care. Part of this is complete lack of information.

    How many of us have written letters to the newspaper to inform people of these issues? How many have called/emailed news stations to suggest a story? How many of us have written to CNN/[your favorite newspaper] to point out the factual errors in their stories?

    How many of use just like to sit back and whine and bask in our own sense of superiority as we, meek little us, defend all of freedom by ourselves?

  145. Oops by Col.+Panic · · Score: 1

    Guess I should have read the next line, eh? :/

  146. I can't wait for the next one by gripdamage · · Score: 2

    I say let em keep producing these copy protection schemes, and we'll keep rejecting em. Eventually, as they enter bankruptcy proceedings, with their last breath maybe they'll ask themselves, "Why did we want to end fair-use in the first place?" Spend as much on R&D as you want Sony; I'm never buying.

  147. May become the next LD by CarrionBird · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Few people seem to remember it now, but Laserdisc was quite popular with videophiles (a similar species to audiophiles). It didn't catch on with joe consumer, because it's only benefit was higher quality and it had the inconviences of higher price and no recording.

    The masses don't really care enough about high quality to pay more or be inconvienced for it. For most people CDs and mp3s are "good enough".

    Myself, while I can tell the difference and could probably afford a SACD setup, It's hard for me to justify the cost to myself. maybe when there are more titles available in stores that interest me.

    --
    Free Mac Mini Yeah, it's
    1. Re:May become the next LD by packeteer · · Score: 1

      this is exactly my point... you are trying to sell a very expensive system to the same people who are happy with 96kbit rate mp3?... come on... it wont catch on and if it doesn't die it wont ever be cheap either...

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
  148. CD's are not the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is the recording. The vast majority of people (probably upwards of 99% of the population) are listening to their music on sub-par stereos. The problem is these are unable to respond properly to the dynamics of music (the speakers are mostly at fault). So in the recording studio, the dynamics are compressed so they give that visceral "impact" without taxing the speakers. Good speakers (driven even by mid-range gear) can respond to these dynamics (shit like Bose cannot). And I'm not talking absolute dynamic range here, I'm talking ability to instantaneously respond to changes, "relative" dynamic range.

    So the problem here is, most people are happy about this, because it makes them say "ooh" when they crank their Klipsh Promedias, but try listening to popular music through a good stereo; it sounds compressed. Maybe that isn't the word that comes to mind ("shitty" would be better), but that's why every true audiophile will tell you that rock music doesn't sound good through high-end speakers. In fact, speakers shouldn't sound good, they shouldn't "sound" at all - they should accurately reproduce what's fed into them. When you feed them shit, you are more likely to notice. There is a good analogy for this: think of it like a TV. You can watch a show on a 13" TV, or even a 19" TV, and VHS quality is acceptable - a decent VCR with a clean tape (we aren't taking degradation of media into account here); this might be indistinguishable from DVD. Now look at a >40" TV. The difference is becoming much more obvious. As the screen gets even larger, like on a big front projection, even DVD can start to show deficiencies. And no digital medium currently used can prevent washed-out images on the largest screens - that's why IMAX still uses film.

    Now change over to audio and substitute screen size for speaker quality - on low-end speakers, MP3's sound pretty good. The deficiencies of the recording don't become apparent until the reproduction equipment gets better. The problem is that only jazz and classical regularly get the good treatment in the recording and mixing process. If you like pop and rock, and you like great sound, then you'll be hard pressed to find a stereo that makes you happy. Very few are at once forgiving and capable.

    Of course, there are limitations to the CD media, but it may not yet be necessary to replace it. Especially not with a multi-channel solution. Surround has no place in the reproduction of music (at least not until recording / mixing technology is light years ahead of where it is now). Don't get me started on that.

  149. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    its redbook actually

  150. "So much for fair use"? by mblase · · Score: 2

    Can't make archival exact copies of your own media. Can't get a replacement for the disc if gets scratched. So much for Fair Use.

    The point of "Fair Use" is that you're legally permitted to make back-up copies of the media you own. It doesn't mean the producer is legally obligated to make it easy, or even possible. The fact that you can't make archival exact copies of the media is inconvenient for you, but it has nothing to do with Fair Use.

    1. Re:"So much for fair use"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then the manufacturer can claim not supporting a means of creating a copy is a copy protection scheme, hence if you are ever able to make a copy, you're violating the DMCA. Maybe then we can get the DMCA thrown out for being unconstitutional?

  151. Time to start hoarding CDs by mrogers · · Score: 2

    Standard CDs are rapidly and quietly being replaced by a variety of non-standard "secure" formats. How long will it be before new releases are only available on "protected" media? If you ever intend to make a mix CD, format-shift an album, play it on your computer or even (gasp!) share it with your friends, buy it now. Forget about boycotting the record companies. Face facts: if you don't buy it now you'll be buying it later, and in a less useful, less flexible format. Grab what you can, the brief age of open media is coming to a close...

  152. Saw these in tower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I came across the SCD and thought they were something you can toss into any DVD player. It had a bunch of new features and new sounds to compliment your insane audio system.

  153. Get a grip by nanojath · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Listen: I am pro independent producers, anti-publishing industry, anti-DRM technology, and anti-copyright extension. But the kind of untruths this poster is spewing do not help the situation. This is the gist of the bill in question:


    "Anti-counterfeiting Amendments of 2002 - Amends the Federal criminal code to prohibit trafficking in an "illicit authentication feature." Defines that term to mean an authentication feature that: (1) without the authorization of the respective copyright owner, has been tampered with or altered so as to facilitate the reproduction or distribution of a phono-record, a copy of a computer program, a copy of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, or documentation or packaging, in violation of the rights of the copyright owner; (2) is genuine, but has been distributed, or is intended for distribution, without the authorization of the respective copyright owner; or (3) appears to be genuine but is not."


    That is a piece of crap legislation but it does NOT prevent anyone from independently producing information in any format they desire and and distributing it by any method they wish. Noone has even attempted to suggest that this could be prevented because it would be such a clear and undeniable violation of the First Amendment. Okay, Some will say yeah, but they'll use this to make non-protected formats illegal. Not according to the language of that bill: They still can't make Ogg, say, illegal: just tools designed to strip DRM-processed files to open formats, or distributing copyrighted files that have been stripped of their DRM information.


    And this is the other side of the coin. Just as any artist has the right to release their information any way they want (due to free speech and their copyrights on original works), the publishing giants have the right to release their garbage in any screwed up format they want - and the idea that the constitution in any way shape or form gives you some "fair use" right to do anything you want with that information may be the way it "should" be but it ain't the way it IS. If you read the fair use provisions in copyright law (I wonder how many /.ers have actually done this...) the literal provisions are very few and minor. Back-up copies or reversioning are not specifically protected, for instance - common mistruths spread on /. True, court precedents have established the right of individuals to carry out some of these activities under the banner of fair use. But this is a different issue. Like it or not, the DMCA spells out in unambiguous and specific terms (unlike copyright law's fair use provisions, at least as they address personal copying) that it is illegal to contravene DRM. That make's the bill in question doubly redundant, since it merely rehashes what is already illegal under DMCA, and aims in the end to prevent unauthorized distribution of copyrighted materials, which was illegal in the first place.


    By all means, fight the power, yeah yeah yeah - watch how you vote, write a letter to your reps. You might even consider unclenching that "omigod if I don't vote for corporate-sponsored candidate X the horror of candidate Y, that ultraliberal tax-n-spend gun-hating tree-hugging/super-conservative religious right corporate-pandering gun-crazy wacko (choose one) in office" knee jerk reaction. You might even ask yourself how likely it is that their are only two possible approaches to solving the world's problems - and that the "side" you have picked of the two options you've been given is the one right, true, correct side, and all them other dips is just crazy stupid deluded fools with no sense. You might wonder what would happen if a whole lot of us started voting for people who don't get their political positions by constantly begging corporations and wealthy individuals for support.


    But remember their is another (not mutually exclusive) alternative, which is simply to not support the publishing industry's products and to instead seek out artists that do not artificially impair the versatility of their product or encumber it with information and costly extra production steps that have no other purpose than to remind you that they think of you as a thief first, a customer second.


    Think about it.

    --

    It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

    1. Re:Get a grip by spitzak · · Score: 2
      No, you think about exactly what a piece of technology that refuses to allow you to record a piece of copyrighted music will do.

      Think about the current state of artificial intelligence, and try to figure out if they are really, really, going to be able to make a system that works that does not prevent independent music and non-copyrighted music to be recorded.

      The fact is that the sky is going to fall, and sane people are going to have to realize this NOW. All information and communication is going to be eventually tied up and censored in ways that Stalin could only dream of, and our government and our corporations are making this happen right now. This is serious shit and denying it is not what is needed.

    2. Re:Get a grip by nanojath · · Score: 2
      The fact is that the sky is going to fall


      Thanks, I needed a laugh this morning - and that quote about sums up thee wacky wirld of slash-dot. Yes, the sky IS going to fall, chicken little. Despite the fact that the eventuality cannot be extracted from the language of the bill in question, and that the contingency you fear would flat out gut the first amendment, yes, it is so: the music industry is going to make everything but super audio cd and windows media player illegal and home tapers and analog hoarders will be interred in concentration camps.


      When will I learn? I scoffed at Y2K and now I have to scoot around in my Mad-Max war wagon stealing food from the concrete bunker set. Now that, my friend, is indeed "serious shit."


      Meantime, while I keep my head firmly lodged in the comfortable sand of rationality, why dontcha review my post one more time and observe my basic advice: quit voting for your basic corporate-sponsored politicians, and quit supporting your basic corporate produced music. I'm already doing these things. Are you?

      --

      It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

  154. It May be better quality but by modipodio · · Score: 1

    is any one ,(audiophiles aside), Going to care? Most people are happy lisening to 128kps mp3's ,(which is ruffly half the sound quality of averege minidisks I think),and the main reason most people bought cd's and converted to them from tapes and vinyl was for convienience ,(easy to get to the song you want etc),more than any thing else.

    My main point is aside from superior audio quality ,(which your average person won't really notice ),what does sacd have to offer and will it be enough to get joe six pack to buy a whole new system to play it?

    --
    __________________________________________________ "UNIX is a fascist state, Windows is a democracy.
  155. What's the big deal ? by minaguib · · Score: 1

    I don't get it. The simple truth is, every single "copyright protection" scheme has to allow the un-encrypted raw data (video or audio) to reach the playing component (speakers for a sound system, speakers + tv for a DVD player, etc etc etc..) So why worry too much ? Let the SACD player play the SACD track, grab the output, pipe it through your sound card with an mp3 encoder waiting on the other end, and presto. It's a bit more work compared to popping the CD in your drive and clicking "rip", but if you're adamant about getting your songs on MP3, this is barely an obstacle.

  156. new format, won't replace old cd's by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

    This is a new format. Given the huge number of cd players out there, the music market will NOT abandon the CD format anytime soon. Also given the huge number of CD's out there new CD players will always be backward compatible with the CD format, and will add the SACD format. This is not the same thing as 8 tracks, LP's and cassettes, since the physical media is the same as CD's. Mostly this is a software change (some underlying hardware too). The DRM stuff will prevent copying a disk since the copy wouldn't play on a licensed SACD player. It still might be possible to rip a SACD and make an mp3 or cd out of it though you'd lose the advantage of the SACD format. Maybe we'll never see licensed SACD recorder and be stuck with CD recorders (another reason why the CD format won't go away).

  157. fair use (I changed the subject line) by alienmole · · Score: 2
    Sony's right to protect their music far exceeds any "right" you think you have to fair use. Your fair use is to listen to the CD you've purchased directly.

    That's not true in law. Fair use, according to case precedent, includes the right to copy music for personal use, timeshifting, spaceshifting, backup purposes, etc.

    If you can beat Sony's copy protection, more power to you. Then your fair use right remains intact.

    Except that the DMCA forbids circumventing copy protection, so some of your legally-protected fair use rights can only be obtained at the cost of breaking federal law.

    If not, tough shit.

    Nice attitude. I say the same to Sony and the other media companies, who are going to run into a lot of trouble with the one-sided "negotiating" they're doing. Consumers can "negotiate" too, which is exactly why the media companies are running scared.

    1. Re:fair use (I changed the subject line) by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 0

      Sony's right to produce their property in any way they see fit trumps any right you have. I'm saying it's survival of the fittest (or smartest). If they can copy protect their property such that you can't break it, then no court is going to say they're in the wrong.

      However, I do agree the DMCA is an unconstitutional piece of shit. This battle should be fought in the technical arena, not the bribe-a-politician arena.

    2. Re:fair use (I changed the subject line) by alienmole · · Score: 2
      Sony's right to produce their property in any way they see fit trumps any right you have.

      There are still ways in which this is not legally true, although proper tests of this in court are yet to come. Specific issues which are likely to come up include the ability to timeshift, spaceshift, and make backups, once protection mechanisms have made that impractical.

      Intellectual property does not have the same legal (or actual) qualities as physical property, as the existence of the fair use exceptions attest. Recent law tries to move away from this principle, largely because legislators seem not to have understood this issue, and/or have been unduly influenced by the media industry.

      The judiciary has a much better grasp of these issues, so I fully expect some of these wrongs to be redressed in future. The dancing around court tests of the DMCA are in part a reflection of the nervousness on the part of the media industry to test it in court - they know perfectly well that aspects of it are on extremely shaky legal ground. Instead, they want a law to use as an out-of-court club, and the DMCA was specifically designed for this purpose.

      I'm saying it's survival of the fittest (or smartest).

      I agree with that in general. However, laws do place some constraints on this - otherwise, the "discussions" with Jack Valenti and Hilary Rosen could be held using some of Charlton Heston's favorite instruments, for example. In the current battle between consumers and the industry, copyright laws which were once quite favorable to the law-abiding consumer have been turned against us, with the potential for criminalizing and/or stamping out much innocent behavior that was once legal. The media companies are now relying on invalid laws to protect their "property".

      This battle should be fought in the technical arena, not the bribe-a-politician arena.

      I disagree. If this were truly a completely lawless, survival of the fittest situation, you'd be right. It's not, though. Copyright law explicitly grants certain rights to consumers, and those rights are based on legal principles relating to the nature of intellectual property. The DMCA and other new laws represent an end run around these principles. If you accept the media company "right to produce their property in any way they see fit", you've already conceded a major point in their favor, which I do not concede.

  158. stones engineers are tin-eared morons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're better of digging out your old vinyl (or even cassette) and sampling it yourself.

    I can't stand to hear "19th nervous breakdown" since they remastered it.

    The remastered Led Zepplin "Presence" CD sucks big time, too. The original vinyl abum had, well... some presence. Bass you could FEEL at low volume, crystal clear high notes. The mastering on that album was of the highest quality.

    The CD, however, sounds almost as good as the mp3s I made out of the sampled vinyl.

  159. Make a deposit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, his +5 Geekfield probably also has a side effect of repelling all nubile females, so you probably don't have to worry anyway. Though Cmd Taco overcame this limitation...

    Well everybody knows that CN can't get laid anyway, but there's always the option of making a deposit at a sprem bank ;-)

  160. Vinly is still the best for one thing... by fishman · · Score: 1

    ...mixing dance tracks. Any decent DJ well tell you that. But I wonder how many /.'s are actually into Dance music?

  161. fp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FP, maybe.

  162. Were they clear about it... by HiThere · · Score: 2

    If they were clear about what they were doing, I wouldn't object. It's far less objectionable than companies buying legislators. I mean far!

    In that case, they are just deciding that they want to exclude a part of their potential market, and as long as they aren't a monopoly, that should clearly be their right.

    The thing that causes concern is that the story at least implies that the disks are being sold as if they were ordinary CD's, when acutally they are unplayable on computers. This strikes me as fraud, and nobody should be allowed to do that, even if they aren't a monopoly.

    If, on the other hand, the music can still be played as CD's on a computer, though without the special features available in the specialized Sony format, then I see nothing wrong with this. Computer speakers aren't designed to play high quality audio anyway. And this is certainly a possible reading from the story.

    As for copying ... I want backups as much as anyone, but I sure understand why the distribution companies don't want to allow copying and distribution. I think that the musicians should, but then I'm a programmer that believes in the GPL, and I know how much more difficult it has made it for software companies to make a profit (i.e., that's not how you make your money in the GPL world).

    Were MicroSoft not an abusive monopoly, I would feel sympathy for them, and the other software companies. As it is, I see the GPL as nearly our sole hope for salvation (and I still feel sympathy for the software companies that *aren't* abusive monopolies).

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  163. Prove the Watermark preventing everything... by idResponse · · Score: 1

    Exactly how incredibly messed up is this technology?

    Seems to me that it's not that incompatible according to sony's claims... from their website:

    Playback can consist of 3 channel, 4 channel, 5 channel or 5.1 channel, depending on what the artist/producer wants to achieve musically. Whether 2 channel or 5.1 channel, multi-channel SACD delivers the same high resolution audio through all channels simultaneously. All channels provide for up to 100kHz frequency response and a sampling rate of 2.822 Megahertz. That's 64 times the sampling rate of a regular CD! With the hybrid disc option, a multi- channel SACD disc can contain up to 6 channels of high resolution audio, a separate 2 channel, studio-mixed version of the same music, AND a regular CD layer which contains the same recording in CD quality so you can take the very same disc and enjoy SACD in your home, car, portable or any existing CD player.

    ^^^
    there it says you can play it in your home, car portable, or ANY EXISTING CD PLAYER...

    well we'll have to stick 'em to it won't we?

    So obviously if the cd can be read by normal cd players, there's a normal audio cd layer, right?

    --
    [)(]subliminal labs[)(]
  164. Re:WTF? Standards anyone? by Dr.Zong · · Score: 1

    thanks for the correct colour, I realized what I wrote when I hit "submit", alas it was to late

    --

    Party?!? What kind of party is this? Where's the damn keg?
    Virtus Junxit Mors Non Separabit
  165. No news here by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


    SACD's have been out for years, no one's buying them. DVD-Audio discs started coming out around the same time, are aiming for the same market, and can be played in the DVD players that everyone already has instead of forcing users to buy a new SACD player.

    This is another Sony audio format failure on par with the MiniDisc -- it meets the needs of a niche market, but generally there are better solutions available.

  166. DRM Circumvention Engine by KraZy-KaT · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the format that was circumvented with a black waterproof felt-tip pen in Chile, my homeland? Geez, now they should sue Faber-Castell, Artline and Sakura for manufacturing DRM-violating technology. I hope I don't get busted while I'm labeling cardboard boxes. -What'ya gonna do now? -- "Mama, I don't know. But what's on every play: it's gotta be funky. Yeah."

  167. Better players=Bad? by MacGod · · Score: 1
    The article contains some interesting information about how Sony is sneakily distributing SACD players without the buyers noticing it.

    Umm, correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't getting a player capable of playing much higher-quality music at no extra charge a good thing.

    "well, gee I only paid for a Ford, but they gave me a Ferarri engine. How dare they!!"

    --
    "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
  168. Just Listen by patiwat · · Score: 2

    SACDs offer incomparably better quality over CDs. The difference is like that of a digital satellite TV over analog cable, or an Apple Cinema Display over a no-name digital LCD. There's no reason why naive slashdotters should be criticizing this new technology based on an incomplete understanding of the specifications - Just Listen!

    If you think the redbook CD is the perfect digital audio format, ask yourself whether CDs have ever made you feel like there was a live performance being played right in front of you. Even on wonderfully mastered recordings with >$50,000 sound systems, I've never really been convinced that what I was hearing was the real thing, and not just a recording. Even binaural recordings on >$3,000 headphone systems don't convince me. SACD does.

    I've listened to Miles Davis improvising an immortal work of jazz, Isaac Stern playing Vivaldi, Ben Zander conducting Mahler's 9th, Gould playing the Goldberg Variations, Bernstein conducting Gershwin to the background of the subway under Carnegie Hall.

    The music was THERE. I could close my eyes and hear the musicians there, I could position them in my minds eye, every note so clear and fluid and relaxed. Musicians dead for decades were reborn, reliving their greatest moments right in front of me. SACD doesn't sound like a recording. It sounds like the real thing.

    If some silly slashdotters want to complain about this preservation of the human music legacy, well, let them. Their lives are poorer from not hearing this wonderful music as it was meant to be heard. All they have to do to understand is Just Listen.

  169. CDs have license fees already by phriedom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sony and Phillips already get fees for every CD sold. Does that stop you from making CDs of your garage band music? Of course not.
    Sure, right now the SACD recording process is probably pretty expensive, and there are only 2 machines in the world that can stamp out the hybrid SACD/CD discs, but it won't stay that way. Sony and Phillips must make it cheap to produce SACDs or else it will go the way of mini-disks.

    Frankly, I think this is the "right" way for Sony to try and improve security on the music. Its not a law. Its not a digital water mark or cactus crap that reduces the music fidelity. The format offers something extra, but doesn't allow you to copy it. I don't see any difference between this and DVD-pre-deCSS. All the people who buy DVDs but don't copy them will see this as pretty much the same kind of thing. Yes, we won't have the technological means to make a our fair use backup, but I can't backup my LP's either.

    If the artists get together and quit the record labels, cutting out the middle men, and start selling ogg vorbis tracks, well that would be really cool, but if the record companies are going to control music distribution, then they might as well give us better sound. I don't see technological measures to stop fair use as being more morally wrong than file sharing.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  170. Sony's Digital Music Marketing Strategy by patiwat · · Score: 2

    Sony's ideal marketing strategy 5 years from now will probably be like this:

    MP3 THROUGH SUBSCRIPTION-BASED NAPSTER-CLONE
    Target customer: People who don't care about music quality, want "perfect" digital backups, want to play on pc, home stereo, and portable player. aka Typical Slashdot reader
    Willingness to pay: Low
    Value proposition: The music you want. When you want it. Where you want it. Faster, more convenient, and more music than Napster or Kazaa
    Quality: 128kbps MP3 equivalent, but claimed to be "CD quality"
    Releases: Entire catalog
    Cost: Cheap (50c a track or $12.50/month for unlimited downloads)

    SINGLE LAYER SACD
    Target Customer: People who care about music quality, want to listen primarilly on home stereos. Typically classical, jazz, or historical recording fans.
    Willingness to pay: High
    Value proposition: Perfect sound forever :)
    Quality: SACD
    Releases: 20% of catalog, or selected albums by specialty order
    Cost: Expensive ($20/SACD for catalog, or 30$ for specialty order)

    The result: labels make more money, consumers get precisely what they want at a bargain.

  171. good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything which prohibits 60s lamers like the Rolling Stones from being heard helps mankind.

    Note to the "Rolling Kidney Stones", please retire.

  172. Re:Some of the Sony DVD combo players CAN play SAC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He claims that every DVD-A disc will play in a DVD-ROM device - which is true. But there is no DVD-ROM device that will play true DVD-A. There are actually quite a few DVD players that will play DVD-A at full resolution - those players will clearly have the DVD-A logo on the front of the player.

  173. Hearing Ultrasonics by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

    Young children can hear out to 20kHz, and occasionally even beyond (I think the observed limit is around 22-24kHz ... but it's vital to note that even then, the sensitivity of our ears to sound at 20kHz is extraordinarily low.

    It's important to distinguish between the what the ear can hear and what the eardrum can hear. Your comments are spot-on for the eardrum, but at some ultrasonic frequencies, there's more to it than that. The range varies from person to person, but often ultrasonics will cause the tiny bones in the ear to vibrate, which in turn creates action against the eardrum, which is detectable by the auditory nerve. You're not really hearing the sound, but you are sensing it with your auditory system.

    Some people believe this to be an essential distinguishing component to the difference in live sound vs. recorded sound. Others think it's important in sound location. I think the jury is still out on both issues. Even if both are true, that's still not the the entire value proposition as to whether we should try very hard to reproduce those signal components. A wise man once said, "Audiophiles listen to noise, not music, and are thus not to be trusted."

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  174. hybrid SACDs will play in ANY CD player by MBishopSFX · · Score: 1

    The SACD watermark will not prevent you from playing the CD-compatible hybrid SACD in your computer or any other CD playing device. There is no watermarking signal imbedded in the audio data of an SACD. Hybrid SACDs are completely backward compatible with all CD players. Further, SACD contains single-bit sigma/delta data sampled at 2.8 mHz, aka Direct Stream Digital. It is NOT heavily dithered pcm. It is NOT 96/24 pcm. There will be SACD players with digi outputs at some point soon - just not yet. probably firewire. One more point - SACDs are not high-priced. Already you can find SACDs discounted to 13.99 USD in many places. Multichannel SACD/DVD players can be had for as little as $119 USD - I just bought one at Best Buy! Best Regards, Michael Bishop Telarc International Corp.

  175. Why do they spend the money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never did understand why they spend all kinds of money on this copy protection stuff. At some point the raw unencoded sound has to be transfered to the speakers. So you simply connect audio output jack of one player to the input of another and you press record. This is how I've recoded songs off the radio, and from cd to tape for ages. Always has work fine for me, and the only way I can think of stoping it is to make special speaker/audio player combinations. Even then a microphone in front of a speaker will get a low to high quality copy depending on what you spent on the microphone.

  176. Why Watermarking won't work by xtronics · · Score: 1

    At some point, the data has to go to a D/A (Digital to Audio converter) At that point the data HAS to be unencrypted. This data may be only available inside the chip, but that will not stop a Chinese CD copier from paying $10K to get the chip opened and probed to bring out this signal. Once one copy has been extracted, it seems rather silly to inconvenience the consumer. Regardless, piracy will continue.

  177. Despite how advanced their watermarking and by elixx · · Score: 0

    authentication of digital rights...

    all of this can be defeated by a simple cable with two RCA mini-jacks, or a similar cable to adapt from audio-out to audio-in.

    Is it really worth the [money|hassle|argument]?

    --
    No, Beowulf clusters can't imagine in Soviet Russia.
  178. So, uhm... by DaRiachu · · Score: 1

    If I buy this POS, erhm, SACD player, will the discs I get for it not just have one or two decent tracks and the rest of it SHIT?!?! 'Cause that's the ONLY reason why I don't buy CDs nowadays.

  179. Why SACD??? by Artemis3 · · Score: 1

    What is the need to waste time with that crappy SACD format when you can have 24 bit 96Khz PCM audio on standard DVDs? I don't even see the need for the so called "DVD Audio" format when the standard DVD already has enough audio capabilities. And DVD-Rs are becoming more and more common. No need to waste time in "Yet Another Sony Deception" format. There are plenty of "24/96" sound cards for production on PCs, and some as cheap as 128$, are a good option for alternative distribution in a media that will play in all dvd players and dvd rom drives on earth.

    --
    Artix
    Your Linux, your init.