Koss Totem Mani-2 User Manual

Page 53

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That could just mean more channels

(8.1 channel surround is one of Blu-

Ray’s options), or it could also mean less

compression. Or no compression.

But here we’re talking about the

video disc. Could one of the new formats

also be tomorrow’s higher fidelity audio

discs?

Sony believes it can, and that seems

to be the reason for its lapsing interest in

its own SACD format. Of course SACD

lives on thanks to audiophile labels, but

Sony Music has its eye on something

else: Direct Stream Digital on a Blu-Ray

disc.

Sure enough, DSD, the audio format

of SACD, is one of Blu-Ray’s options.

So will the Blu-Ray disc replace SACD,

prompting audiophiles (and videophiles)

to buy yet another sort of digital player?

Not so fast!

Though Blu-Ray looks like the prob-

able winner of the battle because of its

larger capacity, the DVD Forum has its

own plans. The DVD Forum is, you may

recall, the guardian of the other super

disc, DVD-Audio. That disc was made

possible by Meridian’s MLP (Meridian

Lossless Packing) compression system.

Is MLP one of the standards for HD

DVD? Well, duh!

But who needs it?

Film lovers want a disc with the

greatest possible capacity, in order to

get the best possible picture. However

audiophiles would seem to have all they

could want already. Either DVD-A

or SACD can give you an hour and a

quarter of high resolution 5.1 channel

surround sound. Who needs a disc with

15 Gb of space? Or 30 Gb? Or more?

We can get a clue by looking at

another of the DVD Forum’s formats,

the Dual-Disc. DVD-A had been done

in by its incompatibility with other audio

players, so why not (belatedly) bring out

a hybrid disc?

SACD had gone to hybrid CD/SACD

formats by using a dual-layer disc, and

that has become the norm for Super

Audio. The DVD Forum has brought

out its own hybrid. Think of it as a

DVD-A disc and a conventional CD

glued back to back. Just put it into the

player the right way up, and you’re good

to go. Unfortunately the thicker Dual-

Disc jams in many players, and some

manufacturers warn that playing one

will void the warranty. Jamming in a car

player is all but guaranteed. However a

new format won’t have that problem.

Not surprisingly, manufacturers

mainly don’t care about the audiophile

world, and for the most part they’ve used

the Dual-Disc format for something

else: a CD on one side, and a video DVD

on the other side. Clearly, the consumer

gets more than by downloading the

music with BitTorrent or eMule.

There’s reason to expect similar

products on either Blu-Ray or HD

DVD.

By the way, hybrid video/audio

discs already exist. Some music DVDs

have both Dolby Digital (compressed)

surround sound and the option of

uncompressed PCM sound that is liter-

ally CD quality. With the extra space

on tomorrow’s discs, both picture and

sound could potentially make a great

leap forward.

Just don’t expect to find a player for

sale in a real store for a while.

ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 

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