Your comment seems to be dismissing my observations as fantasy. I'm a sceptic too when it comes to such things too. However, I don't dismiss someone else's observation just because I hadn't seen it.
No offense meant! Sorry ... wish there was a [sarcasm] tag. I certainly believe that you have legitimate issues! I imagine that you listening to my system and me listening to my system might hear two completely different things, and that's all I meant.
I have a fairly high tolerance for glitches. What you call a "pop" or a "glitch" I might call inherent in listening to MP3-compressed audio (and I can't tell the difference between a FLAC/APE file and a good quality VBR MP3) -- or, even more likely, I won't hear at all because I'd consumed far too much wine. Plus, I'm not using any fancy driver settings or anything (just an Audigy 2 sound card, DirectSound out, analog outputs run into a Klipsch sound system)... Analog outs can cover a whole host of sins in my experience.
I will say though, I have a fairly beefy system (described below) but it is
not a Core2 Duo, and I really honestly can't hear any glitches in playback with all sorts of background tasks running. Sure, when a CPU intensive task first starts up (like launching a game or something) I might get a "skip" or two, but once the task is loaded it's fine.
However, I will say this...
I guess that depends on what you consider 'issues'. I know with video content, MC stutters, freezes, and then loses audio sync if it tries to do anything other than play back the video (like if I plug in my iPod while video is playing, or do any major library maintenance).
This absolutely does NOT happen to me generally. I have an Opteron 165 (AMD dual-core CPU) at 2.6GHz with 2 GB RAM, and I can play high-quality encodes all day with all kinds of background tasks running -- even video encoding, BeyondTV recording, or 3D games running in the background -- with no detectable glitches. Again, immediately when a new task is starting up (if BTV starts recording a new program for example), I
might (and not always) get a 1-2 second glitch or freeze in playback, but it resumes and continues without issue afterwards (same goes for plugging in an external drive)...
My guess is that you have some disk subsystem issues or codec/filter problems. Another thing to check is your memory bandwidth and timings. My memory on that system is running at DDR-280 MHz (dual-channel) at 1T. If you have a Core2 Duo, but you're using DDR2-533 or 667 RAM (or have an Athlon64 X2 but the RAM is running at DDR-166 at 2T, or single-channel, or something), then I can understand having memory-loading glitches. Fast, high quality RAM makes all the difference in the world!