staggerlee:lhc - interested in your view on this, i know you have a lot of knowledge/experience on this. I favour Cd's over computer based audio for the convenience factor and wish someone could convince me that life is easier without CD's.
Well, leaving aside my utter incompetence at not being able to read what BC actually wrote, I'll see what I can do! First point I'd make is that I still buy CDs, I just don't play them directly. I don't download anything (this is a slight lie, I have in the past downloaded 2 MMW gigs that were only available as FLAC downloads and weren't published in a physical format), so you still have to live with the CDs.
The convenience for me relates to:-
1. I don't have to rip my music onto a hard drive, then back that hard drive to another spare hard drive and store it in safe place. (Same music kept on 3 hard drives)
Well, I don't go that far, I rip them from my computer to my NAS, but I keep a copy on the internal HDD on the PC as well as backup. I don't go so far as to keep a copy in offsite storage personally.
2. i can play the Cd in the car, friends houses.
See my first point above.
3. i don't have to worry about wifi speed, signal drop out or Ethernet cables all over the house
My main Sonos zone is plugged directly into my router (as is required), these both live on my equipment rack where the amp is, so there's no wireless dropout and no cables running anywhere other than around the rack (the NAS is also on the rack).
4. I don't have to worry about lossless, WAV or flac formats , how they sound or which is better etc
They sound the same, so you just pick the one that's most convenient to you when you originally set everything up, then you don't need to worry about it ever again.
5. CD albums seem to be cheaper than downloading whole albums - which i then rip to my PC.
See above, I don't download.
6. 24 bit resolution is still years away for me, other than some classical music and niche bands, there is not a lot of material available.
Not something Sonos can handle yet, so I've never given it any thought.
7. I don't need a degree in computers to get NAS's & computers to talk to each other
Neither does anyone else, the software that came with my NAS walks you through each stage of the setup and automatically mounts the NAS's drives to your PC, so even if you don't know how to do it, the software does.
8. The success of MP3's etc is purely down to convenience rather than getting the best sound quality. (feel free to shoot me down on this).
I can't comment on MP3s, I've never heard one. I really don't believe there's any difference in sound quality between FLAC, ALAC, WAV and the original CD though. Or if there is it's either so small I can't hear it or it's never been successfully demonstrated to me (but then I haven't gone out of my way to try it out. Not owning a CD player makes that a little difficult...).