Hi
First an introduction. I have just recently loaded and configured MC on my three year old HP PC running Windows 7. I have the following hardware:
PC sound out through a Realtek audio card, digital S/PDIF to an Adcom GDA 700 DAC, which feeds an Adcom pre-amp, Adcom amp, and out to Klipsch KLF 20 speakers. I have had this system in place for several years, running Windows Media Center. However, because I'm a moron and did not properly research the topic (despite years in the software business myself) my original rips were to WAV because I thought that would preserve the highest audio quality. Because of the known tagging shortcomings of WAV files I moved to WMP lossless but as time went on, I realized FLAC was probably a better format, and when my hard disc crashed and WMP had to be re-educated on the WAV files I decided to bite the bullet, find the best possible media player, convert to FLAC and move on. A week later, here I am. I have about 1700 CDs on the system.
So that's who I am. Now the question:
Obviously with the DAC I'm shooting for the best possible sound, and so it was with some interest and confusion that I read through the documentation on output path, and how you'd prefer if possible to write directly to the hardware without a software layer. The audio card I have in the server apparently doesn't support that because the only path that works is the (Not Direct) path....and this made me very sad because I thought I was settling, and I thought maybe I need to go out and buy another audio card. But then it occurred to me: if I'm going out digitally to the DAC, why would any of that matter. Wouldn't that really only be an issue if the D-A was occurring in the computer itself?
I don't know if this tells me anything, but when I play my HDCD files, the HDCD light on the DAC illuminates, which would indicate to me some quality of signal. But hey, I'm not a hardware guy and since I'm really just getting started, and thought an introduction was in order anyway, I'd ask here.
Thoughts?