Computers can output music through a spdif cable to any full-fledge
home theatre or hifi that takes in spdif or other digital data
streams.
Computers can also be hooked up to very good hifi amps and speakers if
the audio card is up to the mark.
SACD-rs contain the same information as SACDs, except that they do not
contain Pit Signal Processing data that is used to watermark factory-
pressed SACDs.
SACD/universal players that adhere strictly to the Sony PSP copy
protection protocol will not recognise any SACD-R (in actual fact just
a DVD-R) as an SACD if it doesn't contain PSP watermark data.
Only a small group of players support playback of SACD-r, and this
list is now widely available, and hopefully constantly updated.
On Sep 5, 8:58 am, Brian Treml <britre...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So are you trying to say you could Foobar these into 6 channel wav or
> flac files and make a DVD-A or whatever multichannel format you
> wished, and that could be playable on a home system?
>
> I see no purpose in listening to multi-channel sound on a pc through
> crummy little speakers.
>
> Interseting however that there are multiple SACD formats. I was not
> aware that an SACD-R differs from a commercial SACD considering it is
> an ISO image and purly data. Is the header different when burned to a
> DVD as a back up of the SACD format?
>
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