Taking Sides: MiniDisc vs. MP3

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SO, go on bore us all

Yes, that's the problem. This is a stupendously dull subject about which I've expended an outrageous amount of energy in the past. Oh, why couldn't I just let yr comment pass? My stomach gets into little knots when I think of some of the Usenet 'debates'.

are you saying that 24/96k can rival the resolution in the grain of good vinyl? (I realise it's not really comparable and that there are many other factors involved)

Well, what is the resolution of good vinyl? In information theory terms (resolution = dynamic range x bandwidth), vinyl is miles behind - not even very close to 16/44.1k. It's a mistake to think that an analogue system is inherently more 'natural', or has more detail. Every recording and replay system has its limitations.

Do circuits exist that can provide a smooth (actually analogue) interpolation between the x levels available in a digital recording? Do good digital players do this?

*All* digital equipment does this. There are no gaps or stair-steps in the sound - a continuous analogue waveform is reconstructed from the sampled info. The Nyquist theorem states that we only need sample a waveform at at least twice the highest frequency within that waveform to gather a complete record of the data. Now, bandwidth-limiting a musical signal to just above the upper limit of adult human hearing may produce its own set of problems, but we can be sure that the subsequent sampling doesn't chuck anything *else* away.

The fixed number of amplitude levels associated with digital means a limit to how small successive changes in the amplitude can be - but with analogue and its greater associated self-noise, the limits are even more restrictive. The noise obscures anything smaller than itself. So there's *less* resolution in the amplitude domain with analogue despite it being a continuous system.

Is this one reason that LPs can sound better?

There are lots of artefacts associated with vinyl replay which don't completely go away with even the most exotic turntables or pristine pressings. Happily, many of these artefacts are euphonic - phase anomalies magically expanding the stereo image, tonearm resonance warming up the mid-range, HF roll-off giving that silky tone. It's more of a case of what vinyl adds to reproduction, than what CD omits. Beyond that it's a matter of preference.

I accept that 96k probably just about covers it, but what bothers me about say 44.1k is that although you can encode frequencies up 22k, what happens if you have multiple tones around that level running out of phase?

There is heterodyning to consider - the audible difference tones in ultrasonic content not actually being captured in a single 44.1k sampling channel, but I guess this is covered (in multitrack recording) by running at a higher rate, making sure all that harmonic stuff is caught within 0-22kHz (when lots of 96k channels are mixed together), and then down-converting to 44.1k for CD. I'm nudging the limits of my knowledge there and could be spouting garbage.

And 16 bit seems quite limited as well.

Probably not ideal for recording, but not really a problem for domestic playback, especially with dither and noise-shaping to give an effective SNR of well over 100dB in the areas to which the ear is most sensitive.

I do like CDs really.

And I love LPs. I just have this terrible knee-jerk reaction to vaunted notions that there's more of the original music signal on them than CDs. There might well be more 'going on' with playback, mind (groove rush, all manner of harmonic oddities).

Michael Jones (MichaelJ), Thursday, 9 January 2003 19:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

Probably not ideal for recording, but not really a problem for domestic playback, especially with dither and noise-shaping to give an effective SNR of well over 100dB in the areas to which the ear is most sensitive.

Even with the "worst case" of 96 dB, you'll still have to crank up the volume to 96 + noisefloor (30 dB for a quiet bedroom, 26 dB for a recording studio) to hear the difference between 16 and 24 bit. Of course, 16 bit is NOT suitable for tracks that have to be downmixed. So I'm indeed not so impressed by using 24 bit as a playback format. Although with current technology, 24 bit DACs are almost as cheap as 16 bit ones, so it's a bit of a "why not" issue.

Siegbran (eofor), Thursday, 9 January 2003 20:10 (twenty-one years ago) link

Excellent Michael!

Now I can love my CDs without reservation. Oh I think Siegbran just ruined it for me again.

Oddly, I was just listening to a CD of Taj Mahal Travellers' 'August 1974' album before I read your post. The sleeve notes say they use a heterodyne effect 'which changes tone colors back and forth very slowly.' Could never hear it myself...

brainliner (brainliner), Thursday, 9 January 2003 20:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

You're right, analogue is *awful*. Only kidding - or am I?
< TROLL >Hi-fi snobs to thread!
Taking Sides: Analog/Vinyl vs Digital/CDs...FITE!< /TROLL >


No...just kidding...don't answer that.

Lord Custos Omega (Lord Custos Omega), Thursday, 9 January 2003 22:01 (twenty-one years ago) link

Even though CDs sound better (although you really need optimal listening conditions to tell), I prefer Mini-Discs because they're so easy to record. You simply can't screw one up.
Don't like a track? Get rid of it and replace it with another (without first erasing the entire disc, like you have to do with CD-RWs). Don't like the track order? Change it.
I burn CDs now, but only because Mini-Discs aren't compatible with most of the people I know. But they rule.

Jim M (jmcgaw), Thursday, 9 January 2003 22:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

I loved my minidisc player (RIP), but I love my Nomad 3 more. The fact that I can carry over 300 albums worth of music in the front pocket of my jacket is quite possibly the greatest thing ever in the history of the universe. Mp3 encoded at 192k sounds plenty nice to me. The Nomad is kind of bulky and not as pretty as the iPod, but it's a decent trade-off for the difference in price.

I don't quite get those who prefer MD. The only advantage I think it has is in live recording, and that's only if you own one of the Sharp units (size doesn't count as an advantage if you're comparing them to the iPod). Sony MDs make you do everything with three or four buttons, and unless they've changed them recently, it's almost impossible to adjust recording levels plus no adjustments can be made while it's recording. The Nomad 3 will record, but you can't adjust recording levels. As soon as Creative gets off their collective ass and upgrades the firmware to allow for adjustment of recording levels, MD will have nothing on my mp3 jukebox.

Miranda, Thursday, 9 January 2003 23:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

Sure it can hold a shitload more music

I believe that's the point. ;-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 10 January 2003 02:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

Question, do such things as MP3 Hifi CD decks exist? I know I could just buy a DVD player, but I already have one that I don't want to replace. I know every new portable can do it, but the deck manufacturers don't seem to be keeping up.

Graham (graham), Friday, 10 January 2003 19:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

ten years pass...

did y'all know they still made minidisc players?? not for much longer though. RIP big format

DCC fans can still eat a fuc

brand n00bian (haitch), Saturday, 9 February 2013 10:27 (eleven years ago) link

Loving Jonesey's science upthread.

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Saturday, 9 February 2013 10:46 (eleven years ago) link

Aw, this thread.

Still have boxes of MDs. Sony MD deck was taken out of my system in the grand hi-fi sell-off of last summer but then reinstated when I realised I still needed optical and coaxial connections for playing back stuff from the laptop or the Akai HD multi-track. So it gets used every day, just not necessarily with a MiniDisc inside it.

Still a fantastic format for field recording, live practice, etc, with a decent stereo/binaural mic.

Michael Jones, Saturday, 9 February 2013 10:52 (eleven years ago) link

Also: for reasons I don't fully understand, the internal connections around the phono stage in my 25-y-o Cyrus amp are so crummy that one channel of vinyl playback occasionally drops out, but this *isn't* apparent (as often) if I listen to vinyl through the MD deck (Cyrus set to "record phono", Sony MD set to "analogue" and rec-pause). So I listen to a lot of LPs through the MD deck. Which finally fully invalidates my audiophile credentials. Oh well, I had a good run.

Michael Jones, Saturday, 9 February 2013 10:58 (eleven years ago) link

nine years pass...

I still have a bow or two and two working MD player - recorder walkmans. To me the appeal has always been being able to record on the fly.

| (Latham Green), Friday, 23 September 2022 18:10 (one year ago) link

I knew only one person with an MD player. I think I saw it at his house a week after reading about it the first time and being surprised that he knew about it. It seemed like the greatest thing in the world, like a smaller version of a CD that was also re-recordable and even more durable as a portable device - I remember vigorously shaking it for a few seconds just to see if it would skip. (It did NOT.) MP3's came soon after and then once I got an iPod, MiniDisc really did seem like a relic, but it was pretty awesome for a short while.

birdistheword, Friday, 23 September 2022 19:34 (one year ago) link

i have a minidisc with an interview with wendy james on it.

unfortunately i have no idea re whats on it as my MD player died soon after the chat (around the same time she was releasing her first racine album).
also, i had no idea re gadgets and setting things up, so pretty sure it has none of my side of the interview on it.
all that said, we had a cracking chat once she had got home and opened a bottle of bubbly.
(i originally called at the designated time, she answered : 'darling, i am in a taxi, call me back in 15 mins yeah ..' )

mark e, Friday, 23 September 2022 19:43 (one year ago) link

I'd be happy to make it into a mp3 if you want to mail it to me

| (Latham Green), Friday, 23 September 2022 19:53 (one year ago) link

thats not the half of the story.
at the time i was a support desk monkey.
as the time approached re the interview, i decided to come clean with my boss.
soon as he heard the words 'wendy james' he was all 'go into the executive boardroom and do what you need to do'.
i dont think i have ever had such an easy hour off work.

ta for the offer LG, that's very kind of you, but i have lots of minidiscs, and no idea which is the one that has the half sided interview on it.

mark e, Friday, 23 September 2022 19:59 (one year ago) link


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