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I am not sure why you bring up iSheep, an item which was commercialised by Sansa in order to 'force' users to think that iPod, iTunes, and Apple are some sort of cult. If anyone has ever forced anyone to buy things, it isn't Apple in this context.
Saying that, I used to hate all of the above, so I understand your sentiments. My world was MD till 2006 or so when I bought my first solid-state dap: Meizu M6, then the Cowon D2, some iRivers, and lastly solid-state walkmans.
I have no idea why you bring up ATRAC as a feature. No DAP players except Sony and MD players from other companies (no longer in production) support that proprietary format. The only non-standard proprietary format Apple support is ALAC, and for the professional market, AIFF, but that is another story all together.
Sony have pushed customers into ATRAC since 1992, making few changes to the codec, but marketing it through partisan reviews as the best since 1996, most of which have been debunked in public, open listening tests which are not hardware dependent.
Sony continue to make good hardware which has good sound, but they approach the market as if it were still the 1990's and a company had to do all it could to reign it in to make money. Apple, Microsoft, Sony; each company which has a hand in commercial production of music has to protect their own investments.
FLAC can be used in iTunes, so too can OGG with plug ins. From iTunes, you can transcode to other formats from those two if you want (I do this if I decide to rip a CD into FLAC).
I miss the all-in-one feel of Foobar, but only for recording and a few low-level editing features; for playback it is a far cry from the ease of use of iTunes, which is what I want. I can get to any CD I want in about 5 seconds, manage playlists, EQ - everything simply. And while iTunes takes up 75 MB of memory in the background (admittedly, a lot), it isn't much worse than Winamp. I have it on all the time unless doing intense graphics editing.
I am not a sheep. I am a customer who chose iTunes after hating Apple for a long time. No one forced me to buy an iPod; no one forced me to use iTunes. Had I stayed with Sony and wanted to use gapless playback, I would have to buy Windows and use Sonic Stage AND use ATRAC. If anyone forces a hand, it isn't Apple.
I do wish there was a slimmer music-only version however; one which could be used for minimum memory footprint and run quickly from any computer, even Windows. I also wish it would support recording from line inputs and allow low-level integration of AAC Gain and EQ presets to be transferred to the iPod or made there. Apart from those issues, it is neither the devil, a shepherd, or Christ; it is merely a good audio/video/app/rental/do everything piece of software.
Quote:
Saying that, I used to hate all of the above, so I understand your sentiments. My world was MD till 2006 or so when I bought my first solid-state dap: Meizu M6, then the Cowon D2, some iRivers, and lastly solid-state walkmans.
I have no idea why you bring up ATRAC as a feature. No DAP players except Sony and MD players from other companies (no longer in production) support that proprietary format. The only non-standard proprietary format Apple support is ALAC, and for the professional market, AIFF, but that is another story all together.
Sony have pushed customers into ATRAC since 1992, making few changes to the codec, but marketing it through partisan reviews as the best since 1996, most of which have been debunked in public, open listening tests which are not hardware dependent.
Sony continue to make good hardware which has good sound, but they approach the market as if it were still the 1990's and a company had to do all it could to reign it in to make money. Apple, Microsoft, Sony; each company which has a hand in commercial production of music has to protect their own investments.
FLAC can be used in iTunes, so too can OGG with plug ins. From iTunes, you can transcode to other formats from those two if you want (I do this if I decide to rip a CD into FLAC).
I miss the all-in-one feel of Foobar, but only for recording and a few low-level editing features; for playback it is a far cry from the ease of use of iTunes, which is what I want. I can get to any CD I want in about 5 seconds, manage playlists, EQ - everything simply. And while iTunes takes up 75 MB of memory in the background (admittedly, a lot), it isn't much worse than Winamp. I have it on all the time unless doing intense graphics editing.
I am not a sheep. I am a customer who chose iTunes after hating Apple for a long time. No one forced me to buy an iPod; no one forced me to use iTunes. Had I stayed with Sony and wanted to use gapless playback, I would have to buy Windows and use Sonic Stage AND use ATRAC. If anyone forces a hand, it isn't Apple.
I do wish there was a slimmer music-only version however; one which could be used for minimum memory footprint and run quickly from any computer, even Windows. I also wish it would support recording from line inputs and allow low-level integration of AAC Gain and EQ presets to be transferred to the iPod or made there. Apart from those issues, it is neither the devil, a shepherd, or Christ; it is merely a good audio/video/app/rental/do everything piece of software.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BIGHMW /img/forum/go_quote.gif ...and it does NOT support ATRAC either, another reason not to get it, or to join the flock of iSheep who are brainwashed into getting an iPod. Get a Sony Walkman instead... especially an NW-HD5 (if you can find one, I own a few, some for parts, and three for use, the first one (a U.K.-market one with both the volume unlocked and the latest firmware) is being used now, and the other two (N.O.S. U.S.-market models) are backups in case it dies, in which I doubt it will do anytime soon!!! |