Hi Y'all,
I'm finally, now in the process of moving the PC downstairs to my living room/home theater, making the cables and figuring out how to hook everything together. Fortunately (or not, depending on your point of view) I no longer have a "better half" at home to dictate the interior decoration of "her" living room and the college kid just thinks it's cool...as long as he can get to his PS3.
Gotta create a clean "new" account under WinXP that will be for Surround Sound only with nothing else loaded at startup. I want to have all the power of the processor available for SPEC and Plogue. Right now I've got 3 Gigs of ram and am thinking that I'll install a couple more, up to 8 if I can afford it and the slots are available.
I think I've located a pristine DTS 610 that a guy is willing to sell for $25, which will make my monitoring and specifically bass management, a lot less complicated. I'll just let the receiver handle it since I'll be feeding it a DTS bitstream.
Finally, a few quick questions..spam reading through a bunch of posts in the forum, and because I use a Mac in my day-to-day work (but not planning to for upmixes), I saw a post from 2010 by Zeerround from back in 2010 regarding ripping and creating .cue sheets on a Mac using XLD. This is actually something that I may do since the Mac is otherwise available. With the latest version of XLD, its a very easy process and I would just rip to an external drive. My questions are this, in the sequence of instructions that Zeerround gives for the XLD ripping process, he mentions that he .FLAC encodes the ripped .WAV file. Why do we want to do this? Will SPEC sill accurately upmix a compressed audio file, even if it's "lossless" from FLAC? What about monitoring? Does the FLAC have to be decoded somewhere in the process for accurate monitoring? And finally, since I will be using a PC and not a Mac, do I even need to worry about using FLAC at all? It seems to me that the advantages of size and time constraints that any type of compression, FLAC or otherwise, are not really an issue with the large external drives we typically use these days and since we (most likely) aren't working under any deadlines.
Thanks again guys (and/or gals) for your patience with a noobie. Hope to get started soon. Now I've just got to figure out what a good CD will be to start with!