Bit perfect means that there are no alterations to the original digital samples. They are sent directly to the DAC with no processing or DSP. "Upsampled" usually means that a lower rate (say 44.1kHz) is converted to a higher rate (like 192kHz). This process changes every single sample. It is not "bit perfect" in any way.
right, thanks!
that's what I thought I had setup in my windows setup:
MC -> disabled all DSP outputs, and set wasapi -> Musiland USB driver (bypasses windows default 44khz limit in usb, opens throughput for 192khz 24bit untouched) -> Musiland USB-DigiCoax converter -> DAC
That means that Core Audio on the Mac has audio processing capabilities built in to the Operating System (Mac OSX). What JRiver is saying is, they don't use the OSX audio processing at all. They do their own (optionally using the DSP Studio) and then pass the resulting audio to the operating system where it is not altered any further.
gotcha!
If you want bit perfect output, disable all sections of DSP Studio. Turn the volume in MC to 100%, or set Volume Mode to "disabled", which will bypass the volume control, keeping it at 100%. Turn off any cross fade between tracks. Turn off "do not play silence".
Brian.
awesome, thank you Brian! I got that part within MC's software.
Just one more thing that still has me confused:
The sole reason I used the Musiland USB dongle was to overcome the windows USB limitations.... so are you saying that once I set the DSP stuff to "OFF" in MC (As i did with the windows version), I don't need to do anything in the Mac HW or the OS X? there are no 44khz constraints on the USB output of Macs? ?
if that's the case, that's pretty awesome...i can remove one more piece of unnecessary HW from the chain