I was wondering if there are any audio plugins for JRiver on Mac to improve audio performance. I'm led to believe that JRiver uses the internal Mac Core Audio, and that this is left wanting compared with some others
I'm not sure what others are "wanting" from JRiver's sound that it doesn't have. JRiver is considered to be one of the best sounding players around by many. I've seen a comparison a while back of JRiver on PC versus JRiver on Mac and the sound was measured to be identical. They did this by capturing the output of each system and digitally comparing the two. The results were identical. Listening tests also confirmed that there was no audible difference.
Here's JRiver's blurb on it's "audiophile features":
http://www.jriver.com/audiophile.htmlTo me, the most important of these are:
64 bit processing internally. This means that JRiver has essentially a perfect digital volume control. It also means that all DSP processing, Source Rate Conversion, etc are all done in a domain that can't be digitally saturated or "overrun" because the math has such an enormous threshold. If they were only processing in 24 bit (for example), digital EQ might over run the limit causing digital clipping. This is almost impossible with 64 bit processing.
DSP Studio is the other big one. Well, 64 bit processing is part of this, but the feature that uses it is DSP Studio. Frankly, the features built in to the DSP are borderline amazing. Graphic EQ. Parametric EQ. Crossover. Channel reassignment. Channel mixing. Convolution filters (for room correction). There are more, but those are huge features.
You can use the graphic or parametric EQs to alter the sound to correct for your headphones or speakers response. I've done minor EQ to several headphones and made nice improvements. It's not always desirable, but it's VERY nice to have the option.
If you're looking for "audiophile magic" from your player, JRiver has been praised for having it. Memory playback has been said by some to improve the sound, so you might try it. I doubt it makes any difference, but it's there to try (Tools > Options > Audio > Settings).
Hopefully this gives you a little better idea of what JRiver can do.
Brian.