I still haven't heard a reasonable argument about how a hard disc hurts sound quality. (any more than a northbridge chip, PCI card, etc.) It sounds like snake oil.
However, if you're really worried, my advice would be to invest in an outboard DAC or outboard soundcard. Then only a digital bitstream leaves the computer. You could also use NAS harddrives so no hard drives are in your computer. This is better than prebuffering because prebuffering still would spin a drive up and down and read from it for a while.
Mastering software often needs tricks to reduce latency. (think MIDI simulation from a hardware keyboard, or instant application of mixing effects) This doesn't really apply to playback programs like Media Center where a 100ms delay in the DSP chain for a change to take effect is not such a problem.
Hi Matt.
I am not worried all.
The way I am running my setup right now is great working and shows more than obvious sound improvements. I am really happy with the outcome.
And I do not intend to discuss this fact.
From convenience point of view it would be a nice-to-have feature if it was integrated into MC. Programming effort should be very low here.
Anyhow - If you folks don't care. I don't care.
As far as you know MC is doing 6s pre-buffering. And this is the reason why I ask for full file buffering, as you said this 6s prebuffering is useless since the drive would always be spinning.
Spinning up the HD at the end of the track doesn't harm the sound at all. If it is done smart, the loading won't be even recognized. To load a 30 MB average wav-track into RAM won't take
more than 2s. To load a complete CD into RAM takes less than 20s.
I am running an external DAC. Playing with the buffer sizes and latencies, which is possible with Samplitude and the used ASIO driver will have a great impact on sound quality! If done wrong
it can really mess up your sound. It is not a PRO or midi issue only!
BTW I am running a different HW-profile for audio. You can switch off - wlan, network, internal sound, bluetooth asf. This also makes a difference!
Before I start using NAS drives, I try to get my PC, with its given configuration, best configured as possible.
Cheers