This is an idea Matt had last week. It would be nice to get your feedback.
Consumer Electronics receivers are becoming computers. Good ones are in the same price range as computers -- $500 and up.
The idea Matt is thinking about is this: Use the PC to do all decoding and pre-processing and pass an analog signal to a device that is only a simple, pure amplifier. He believes the quality can be at least equal to the normal CE approach, and the setup for receiver features like room correction can be made a lot easier.
i really like this idea of matt. a big thanks. ive been playing around with the new dsp tools the whole day and it is really nice.
first my setup:
audio card with 8 analogue outputs (rme
Fireface 800 (about 1400 $). for playback i only use 4 of those.
front 2 nearfield active studio monitors yamaha msp5 (about 150 $ each back then).
back an very old sony amp and jbl speakers with a passive subwoofer in between.
with the mixing software from the audio card this has always made it possible to play 7.1 movies with good sound.
now it would be nice if it would also be possible to leave stereo files stereo files, but clone them to the back speakers, so nothing from the center speaker or subwoofer, to my ears and with my setup it sounds better that way.
now i can set in dsp that i use four speakers and clone the channels, and that sounds great, especially with some of the effects, but it makes it necesarry to rerout stuff in the mixer software when i get 5.1 files, because the 5.1 (cccp) see the 3rd channel as center and the 4th as subwoofer. so it would be nice if the second stereo pair get an other ofset.
one problem is though, that when you set the speaker output to 4 speakers, and try to play a 7.1 wav (i only have one, the ms test file) the file wont play, when i set it to 7.1 it does, but the center and the subwoofer channel gets a signal.
Thanks again
gab