In article 4a6881f4.21074781@localhost, Don Pearce
wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 15:13:56 +0100, Jim Lesurf
wrote:
Hi,
I've just put up a new page
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Linux/Sou...stenAgain.html
This discusses how I setup a (Ubuntu) Linux box to access the BBC
iPlayer, and provides some measurements on the results that look at
some aspects of the BBC aac/aac+ radio iPlayer.
Slainte,
Jim
The line thickening (and LF zigzag) - is that an artefact of the FFT, or
is threre really some modulation going on?
I think that is an artifact of my using simple 'triangular' apodisation
windowing. Plus, I think the finite resolution of the data. (I use a series
of FFTs power averaged to improve the SNR.
Fortunately the test tone stream the BBC/Siemens provided was dithered even
if the Flash plugin doesn't apply dither when computing volume level
rescaling.)
The line may appear thicker in some places as a result of the graphics
anti-aliasing where the angle or some other detail changes. That doesn't
show up with the vector graphic source. (All my graphics are generated as
'drawfiles' which are like a subset of PostScript line vector/object
commands. But I then have to generate a bitmap for the website versions.
That always degrades the appearance a bit. )
Your warnings about the distortion in the headphone output, but I'm
guessing that most people will use the line output, which I presume is
clean.
I don't know. But my experience makes me reluctant to presume line output
will be clean. So I'd say "maybe" to that.
The *only* analogue out for the laptop I used is the headphone. So I'd have
expected that not to clip when fed 0dB. In fact it clips at a far lower
level than 0dB. This is when it wasn't even driving a load with an
impedance anything like as low as a typical headset.
When I listened with a pair of headphones the sound was very loud unless
you wound down the volume a lot. So the gain applied between the internal
DAC and the headphone output stage was needlessly high. Would have been
fine if this had been reduced so 0dB didn't clip. So it all seemed like
careless design to me. The usual idiotic motto: "louder is better".
So for all I know some computer sound systems will also clip the 'line'
output. I can just warn people to be wary just in case. Check if you can.
Arny may know more about this. I've only been checking computer systems
recently once I'd developed and interest.
FWIW if I can blag a borrow I will try out some other USB 'soundcards' to
see how they work (if at all!) with Linux. Then report on what I find out.
A number of these have appeared recently. But I've only seen limited
results based on windows and macs.
The DACMagic is excellent in my opinion. I would recommend it to anyone who
has doubts about their existing soundcard. Subject to the caveat that I
can't say of someone else's hardware or OS version might not be willing to
co-operate. I had to change to Pulse Audio to get the iPlayer Flash plugin
to use it. So there may be other snags I've not encountered. This is the
problem with computer based systems. There are all too many hidden snags.
I've been quite surprised by how useless most magazine 'reviews' of
computers are in these respects. The seem to never do any measurements on
the output. So never say if the correct sampling rate is used, or if there
are any needless conversion artifacts, or even if the machine is
mechanically silent. About all you tend to get in the magazines I've seen
is a general 'sound works' comment - which means little more than they
could hear something! That may have been OK years ago. But now people are
increasingly using computers as sound sources for audio this should be
taken far more seriously IMHO.
Otherwise we may have people deciding that computer audio, and things like
the iPlayer have inherently poor sound, when the reality is that their
setup is mangling the sound. The solution in magazines is to spend
thousands on dedicated special purpose systems. But my own experiments
show you can get good results without spending vast sums. Alas, there is a
lack of the information needed to identify the correct kit and how to set
it up.
For example. I've been looking for some time now for a small laptop that
fits the bill. The requirements seem simple to me;
1) Must be mechanically silent. No fans or hard disc noises.
2) Fairly small so can be used like a radio tuner, etc.
3) Digital (ideally optical) output that gives the correct sample rate for
the source material, with no needless 'reconversions'. Thus able to output
bit-perfect results for LPCM sources.
4) Works with Linux. Ideally Ubuntu family as that is the popular choice at
the moment.
You'd think makers would currently be falling over themselves in the rush
to offer such systems. Nope. Not that I can see. Only a few ultra-costly
machines with specialist setups.
You'd think magazine reviews would be identifying them. Nope.
I was tempted by the fit-pc2 as it is said to run with Linux, is small and
silent, and I can use an external DAC. But I've since been told it doesn't
currently work with Ubuntu 9.04 and has various hardware snags. So no cigar
unless the snags are sorted.
Ditto, I wondered about the Dell Mini 9 as that got a decent review in a
linux mag. But I've since been told it also has snags, and has been
replaced as a model!
Slainte,
Jim
--
Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me.
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