... I recently saw a video on YouTube (RMAF16: Computer Audio Demystified - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEztALnHhQg) where the presenter compares two systems running JR and it appears most people in the room hear a better sound when JR feeds the DAC from an high-end powerful laptop vs an old low-end weak laptop. ...
I have an IT background and I have a hard time believing more CPU power, more memory (RAM), etc... ... Thoughts anyone?
I watched about half of the video in the hopes to learn something new.
The first thing he did was told the audience what to expect to hear before playing the first sighted A/B listening test. He basically set the expectation bias (tainting the response) seconds before pressing play.
He did not measure the outputs to make sure they were level matched but told the audience to trust him that they were the same and that said that lower noise floors give the perception of louder volumes. If he took measurements, he could have demonstrated the relative volume levels and noise floor levels. I think this was a [un]intentional missed presentation opportunity.
He suggested configuration optimizations for audio that are the same configuration optimizations any good IT person would do to optimize their own hardware to get the best performance for computing. He did NOT mention tuning off non-essential resource consuming processes/features to make the most of the hardware one has which is another miss in my opinion.
He brought up EYE PATTERNS and jitter and implied it was an issue. He did NOT ask the question, does it matter to well engineered asynchronous DACs and if so how bad does it have to be to make a difference. He then brought up reclockers and mentioned the ReGen product as an implied remedy.
Independent tests demonstrated the ReGen product made no improvements to well engineered asynchronous DACS (even inexpensive DACs costing less than the ReGen by itself). During the independent testing, measurements showed the ReGen's digital switching wall wart power supply was actually introducing noise into the signal so it was actually doing more harm than good. After much back and forth between the independent tester and the vendor of the ReGen product, the ReGen vendor finally fessed up to the PS noise and said he would change their digital switching wall wart power supply vendors.
There was only 1 poorly engineered asynchronous DAC (of the DACs tested) that showed measured improvements with the ReGen reclocker. It was cheaper to buy a properly engineered asynchronous DAC than the tested DAC plus the ReGen so money ahead to not use either. All of the other cheaper and more expensive DACs showed no improvements.
He also glossed over the counter question about memory playback. If USB drives are so error prone, there would much bigger problems with functioning computers. Entire operation systems are run off of USB thumb drives without a glitch or crash.
He brought up some good points to computer newbies, but unfortunately I did not learn anything new. There appears to be some room for refinements in his presentation IMO.