why do peple think ipods are just for bkgrd music


The ipod will be how we listen to music not just for background but for critical listening. They will be transports for the ipod like the msb ilink 2,200. It is a true transport that deals with the jitter just like the cd transport. Now you have ipod docks like the wadia 170 all it does is bypass the ipods dac. I would use the wadia 170 dock as background music. Iam not knocking the wadia but its not a ipod transport.
usarmyvet91
brianmgrarcom iam not knocking the wadia 170 itransport just the opposite. I think that this is the furture and the cd transport will be the past. Yes the msb bypasses the ipod dac but it all so address the jitter. Just like the cd transport their are transports that are better than others. I have not yet listen to the wadia 170 yet, i have one on order at musicdirect when its out. Yes i think some dac address jitter and some do it better.
Usaarmy91, sorry if I am putting words in your mouth, but you do make comments that come across negative to me.

I would use the wadia 170 dock as background music. I am not knocking the wadia but its not a ipod transport.

Also:
Yes the msb bypasses the ipod dac but it all so address the jitter.
This is interesting to me because the iTransport is marketed, I believe, as the only licensed product from Apple to bypass their DAC. While the iTransport does not address jitter, if your DAC does, it is basically a non-issue, from what I understand. There is a clocking(?) signal sent via the cable from whatever transport you use, to the DAC, so it can be done at either place.

I believe dCS has a 3 piece CD system, a transport, clocking (jitter) unit and then the DAC.
then this is some of the best [background] music I've ever heard, besting my previous CDP*.

System:

Wadia iTransport/iPod
Shindo Aurieges-L
Reimyo DAP-777 mkII
TRON Cantata 300B SET Mono's
Horning Agathon Ultimate Speakers

*Accustic Arts CDP-1

I only import CD's with Apple Lossless (MAC/iTunes). Only an audiofool would think compressed [MP3] music files could sound good, let alone the analog output from an iPod into their system.

I also tried the Squeezebox and would rate it as good as the iTransport sound (except for the constant wireless dropout issues I encountered with it). Personally, I prefer this approach because it's remote and the music comes from my MAC/iTunes (no copying over to iPod, picking choosing,..etc).

Note: I also tried a number USB DAC's since selling my CDP (the solution I had initially decided upon). These ranged from under $1000 and on up to $3500 tube DAC's. I wasn't satisfied (Benchmark DAC-1 being the worse). That was a disappointing experience. I also tried a USB/SPDIF Converter, just so that I could say I did. Aaagh! It was horrible.

What's nice about the iPod is that it has less HW/SW then a computer. It's also battery powered, although not when used with a dock such as the iTransport. It's not perfect high-end, but it does a very good job for what it is and the price. My favorite music server though would still be the Sooloos, but it's way over priced - for a computer. If only the MAC had a digital output [SPDIF] and iTunes offered high-resolution downloads.

I do have a few complaints with the iTransport though; the main one being the cheap fit/finish/materials, even for China standards and a price tag of $379. (To compare, look at the iPod, how well that is made and it's finish/materials). I don't like the rough paint finish. The remote is extremely directional too. I can be pointing it right at the unit, a foot away, and it won't respond. Don't care for the feet either.

Anyways, the music is more then satisfying in my system. There is no "one" solution unfortunately, but given what can be done with something like a MAC/iTunes/SB3 or iTransport/iPod combo it sure opens the door to a convenient music listening experience saving on the expense of high-priced CDP's and CDT's limited to playing one CD at a time. I've imported about 450 CD's (341 Artists, 5438 songs), and all that fit on my iPod Classic 160GB. It offers features such as "Cover Flow" and many others for playback. I haven't enjoyed playing music this much before. Hearing songs in a different order amongst different artists changes your listening perception too, opens your ears as it were. You fall in love with your music all over again and yearn to discover more. So stop whining about "jitter", or "HD's", or "backup",... and start listening. Yes, computers aren't the best thing, but neither is a CDP.
I think CDPs and CDTs will be replaced by computers. Some of those computers may be very small with small capacity hard drives (like Ipods) some of those computers will be larger and have larger hard drives (PCs and Macs).

One thing is certain though, CDPs or CDTs are not going to be replaced by any computer (large or small) that is playing MP3s or any other lossy format.

Another thing that is certain is that high quality CDPs or CDTs or computers connected to external digital processing devices are not going to be replaced by any computer large or small (even an Ipod) that puts out a crappy analogue signal.

In their present form Ipods are little computers that put out bad analogue audio signals and deliver poor sound quality. They are not going to replace any single piece of equipment (or any combination of equipment) that puts out truly high quality analogue audio signals and delivers very high sound quality.
In their present form Ipods are little computers that put out bad analogue audio signals and deliver poor sound quality. They are not going to replace any single piece of equipment (or any combination of equipment) that puts out truly high quality analogue audio signals and delivers very high sound quality.

On the contrary, the iPod is cable of exceptional performance and one is not limited to storing low quality compressed files, you can store bit-for-bit copies of your CD's in WAV or AIFF format, I also believe Apple Lossless is near impossible to detect a difference in.

What is being discussed with the iTransport is bypassing the DAC of the iPod and using the iPod as a music server.

There is a nice little write up in the current issue of Playback Magazine