m-i-c-k-e-y
Headphoneus Supremus
Sorry late to the party, don't if it has been answered: JRiver LinuxI have not found anything that can play SACD ISOs on Linux. Can anyone recommend a good player comparable to Foobar2000?
Sorry late to the party, don't if it has been answered: JRiver LinuxI have not found anything that can play SACD ISOs on Linux. Can anyone recommend a good player comparable to Foobar2000?
MPD-SACD (a fork of regular MPD) can play SACD and DVD ISO's. Its in the AUR and on GitHub.For SACD ISOs, why not just convert them to FLACs? That can be done lossless-ly.
Quodlibet would be the desktop app I recommend. LMS would be the full on music server program I would recommend.Guys any app other than DeadBeef player which plays bit perfect audio in Linux, got fed up with DeadBeef as it doesn't provide any library feature for browsing my music, tried Rhythmbox and Clementine both resamples the audio so can't use it.
I think he's missing the point in a big way, and I think y'all are wasting your time trying to talk sense into this guy. He essentially think that "bit perfect" audio is some esoteric, mythical thing... it's not. It's very simple. Does it output digital audio at the original sample rate without conversion or EQ? If yes, then congrats you've got bit perfect audio. That is exactly what happens when you output to an ALSA hardware. Want proof? Well, that's what it was designed to do and it's not broken... so there you have it, bit perfect audio. Don't believe me? Go read the source code and see exactly what it's doing.My first post offered some tools to narrow down issues with the audio path. If I use both pulse audio and ALSA, I want to make sure my music player uses ALSA and doesn't mix the sound. For me, this is my only concern.
In your post #498 you are asking for proof that Linux offers bit-perfect sound. The question suggests that Linux isn't capable of outputting bit-perfect audio.
While I can't proof or disproof bit-perfect audio under Linux, at least not right now, I suggest to look at what vendors of top end audiophile music players are selling you: essentially Linux boxes.
I didn't do an all inclusive survey, but have a look at aurender, Lumin, Music Fidelity, Naim, and probably more. There are exceptions too: Taiko Audio Extreme runs a Custom Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC OS.
With music server vendors that run Linux, you have to look for the small print to identify them as Linux servers. I guess Linux still carries the stigma of a nerd OS.
I hope you accept this indirect answer. It's not a proof (perhaps someone else can proof it). My other post may help narrow down issues with your Linux audio configuration.