Ableza
Headphoneus Supremus
Well said.Yep, but the top-end SHARCs are spendy, as well as speedy. And ARM has many, ah, arms. At least as I understand it.
Well said.Yep, but the top-end SHARCs are spendy, as well as speedy. And ARM has many, ah, arms. At least as I understand it.
Yes, the RasPi is a powerful little computer, and yes, I can see where they could make it so integral in their designs, and end dependency on outside suppliers like SHARC. Maybe I heard it wrong, but Mike's "new" USB will be a simpler design, which shows improved sound quality. I cannot see them going anyway but Open Source... Which reminds me of a huge international news agency which I worked with. The Brain-Trust on Fleet Street in London decided in the mid-1990s that they needed a closed-system solution for digital picture distribution.
Every major Newspaper and Magazine had bought into the AP Picture Desk, which was based on ".jpg". But, the snooty Brits just had to be different.
So they gave a butt-load of Capital to a start-up who designed the Phoenix T-One. They paid a software engineer BIG BUCKs to design a "proprietary algorithm" that only folks with Reuter's receivers could use... Only later did our guy in Detroit figure out that their "exclusive proprietary algorithm" was a software code that said: "If a photo is ".JPG", rename to ".CMP". And if you changed the "word length" from 2048 (max size in pixels on long edge) you could use their Nikon Scanner and computer to make your own ".jpgs".
Shortly after that, the chief photographer called up Leaf Systems and ordered 10 new Leafax transmitters--just like the AP--for $25K per unit. (I have Number 775 sitting here right now)
I understood they were hitting to the limits of the SHARKS and therefore were triggered to come to something with more capacity for what they want to do now and in the unknown future. I really like the name; you can actually say then that you’ve a SchiitPi insideSchiit already employs SHARC processors for many of the sophisticated functions and controls required by their designs. Adapting that (or a version of that) to other functions such as receiving a music data stream from a server is a programming challenge, but not the same as adding a "Pi" device. Their own version of a "pi" like device, perhaps.
A great understatement.Analog Devices will tell you that the new dual-core SHARCs are every bit as capable and faster than the ARM Cortex that Pi and many others run, so it's just a matter if which SOC you choose. And, as someone who works for a semiconductor industry hardware manufacturer I can tell you it's not just about hardware horsepower, it's about programming. Indeed, it's mostly about programming...
Supporting open source and employing in product are very different things."Just a heads-up, Schiit is not into open source. They hold their designs close; both hardware and software." --FrivolsListener
Does Schiit support open-source development or are your designs and software closely held secrets?
That is why i like sonarworks on my iMac, they did some fine coding that runs great and stable with good result into my glass pipeAnalog Devices will tell you that the new dual-core SHARCs are every bit as capable and faster than the ARM Cortex that Pi and many others run, so it's just a matter if which SOC you choose. And, as someone who works for a semiconductor industry hardware manufacturer I can tell you it's not just about hardware horsepower, it's about programming. Indeed, it's mostly about programming...
Loved that show. Went off the rails a bit (for me) in later seasons. Heh, I blame warehouse 13 for my interest in glass tubes sticking out of my (future) headphone amplifier. Sure, I was born in the age of transistors (1970, eh). It’s so odd seeing a resurgence of obsolete (!?) technology. Hybidization... happens in botany and apparently in electronics. What’s old is new again...Eureka is next door, so I'll go and check
Damn... don't tell my students that. I wonder if that’s one reason why @SchiitFerBrainz doesn’t show the viewer what’s on the displays when the assemblers flash the boards (reverse engineering). Perhaps Schiit does use encryption on their chips. I don’t wanna know. I still have flashbacks of bricking my wife’s work laptop during a BIOS update.Can those SHARK's be hacked?
Smart analogy.Just like cooking (at last for us Italians; who know how to do that) it's not the ingredients alone, it's what you do with them......
The Schiit ModiMB are heavily discounted! I dont regret buying mine last year (if you were to ask me how different it sounds, I couldn’t tell you.... ah well). My Vali’s on its way to me and that should keep me happy for a bit (as I listen to the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet)...FYI...
I just noticed that the Schiit B-stock went from zero to a long list today:
http://www.schiit.com/b-stocks
.... And I think this is one of the big reasons for going to ARM. Schiit can't make Cheap Products(CP) if they are sending all the money to Analog Devices.Yep, but the top-end SHARCs are spendy, as well as speedy. And ARM has many, ah, arms. At least as I understand it.
FYI...
I just noticed that the Schiit B-stock went from zero to a long list today:
http://www.schiit.com/b-stocks