Neil writes:
>>Either the data is read correctly or it isn't. Data is buffered as much as
a second ahead of where it is with plenty of time to recover. If you have
exactly the same data with no buffer underrun, wobble or no wobble, it
will make no difference.<<
I was thinking the same thing. A wobbly 1 or 0 is still a 1 or 0. Unless data
is being dropped or lost because of the wobble, there will be no sound
difference.
When CD's hit the market years ago, Computer Music Journal had an article
showing that the digital data affected listeners. People grew weaker and were
not able to lift as much weight when listening to a CD as opposed to a vinyl
record. How ridiculous, considering the CD output is filtered and appears as a
continuous analog signal at the output.
-Elhardt