EliasGwinn
Member of the Trade: Velidoxi & Benchmark Media Systems
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Posts
- 946
- Likes
- 17
Yes, kmixer itself is relatively harmless. As for iTunes, you must be careful of a few things:
1. iTunes volume control should always be set to 100%, as volume reduction in iTunes causes severe distortion. This is because volume calculations will result in 24-bit words, even if the audio was initially 16-bit (due to remainders after division). iTunes will then truncate to 16-bits, instead of dithering or simply passing 24-bits
2. iTunes will convert the sample-rate of any audio with different sample-rates then that set in QuickTimes preferences (yes, QuickTime preferences affects iTunes!!) Be sure that sample-rate corresponds to the sample rate of the audio you are listening to.
3. For the purest audio playback, do not use the "sound check" or "sound enhancer" features in iTunes. All of these DSP and/or audio plug-ins in all media players should be avoided to obtain faithful playback.
All of this will be covered in our "Guide to Computer Audio", which will be available on our website soon. I'll let you know...
edit: this refers to iTunes version 6. See our wiki for the most up-to-date information.
1. iTunes volume control should always be set to 100%, as volume reduction in iTunes causes severe distortion. This is because volume calculations will result in 24-bit words, even if the audio was initially 16-bit (due to remainders after division). iTunes will then truncate to 16-bits, instead of dithering or simply passing 24-bits
2. iTunes will convert the sample-rate of any audio with different sample-rates then that set in QuickTimes preferences (yes, QuickTime preferences affects iTunes!!) Be sure that sample-rate corresponds to the sample rate of the audio you are listening to.
3. For the purest audio playback, do not use the "sound check" or "sound enhancer" features in iTunes. All of these DSP and/or audio plug-ins in all media players should be avoided to obtain faithful playback.
All of this will be covered in our "Guide to Computer Audio", which will be available on our website soon. I'll let you know...
edit: this refers to iTunes version 6. See our wiki for the most up-to-date information.