manheimer@nbs-amrf.UUCP (Ken Manheimer) (01/19/85)
I noticed in a recent issue of Stereo review (~ 2 or 3 issues back) a single page article/review about a prototype of a new audio recorder. The interesting thing about it was the effective use of a standard computer floppy (I think 5 1/4", single side, double density) as the recording medium. With the benefit of what seemed to be an adaptive sampling technique, over an hour of high fidelity music could be recorded on a single disk. (I've seen a presentation by a computer music wizard who could fit 4 minutes of high fi per floppy; to play a synthesized version of Pachelbels canon that he recorded he had to gang two floppy disk "players" and go through a series of ~ 6 floppies! The sound was fine, as far as I could tell, though I was hearing it in a school auditorium...). The reviewer said that, while the sound may not be up to par with CD's, he felt it at least measured up to any vinyl (or was it any analog medium?) around. The price mentioned was somewhere near $1000 (1100?). Such a thing, if bona fide, has a lot going for it. Foremost is the opportunity to use it for record in addition to play back - the lack of which is what I consider to be CD's chief drawback (followed closely by their expense). Why bother with records (CD or vinyl) and tape decks if you can have both in one? Has anybody heard more about this? Unfortunately, I noticed the article while perusing the store rack, and by the time I decided to go back and buy it the subsequent months issue had come out. I haven't found the issue in my library, and there wasn't too much info in the article anyway. I've been holding out on buying a tape deck and a CD player for a long time now, and maybe this thing (with the inevitable further improvements and price reduction) would justify it. Ken Manheimer {seismo,allegra}!umcp-cs!nbs-amrf!manheimer (Existence is influence. Probably.)
mroddy@enmasse.UUCP (Mark Roddy) (01/21/85)
[RE $1,000 + for digitalized floppy] It won't be stereo, but digitalized record and playback can be done through an adaptation of the Atari 800's audio port- cost for the whole adaptation ~$15.00, atari + drive ~$250.00, public domain software + instructions on Compuserve (SIGATARI).
wmartin@brl-tgr.ARPA (Will Martin ) (01/22/85)
I've sent the poster of the original of this copies of a couple long articles I had posted on CompuSonics' floppy-disk recorder/player. No need, therefore, to reiterate our previously-held long discussion on the subject. Will Martin
ron@brl-tgr.ARPA (Ron Natalie <ron>) (01/28/85)
> The reviewer said that, while the sound may not > be up to par with CD's, he felt it at least measured up to any > vinyl (or was it any analog medium?) around. Foo. If he said vinyl, he's off base. CD's only advantage over vinyl is surface noise immunity. It's that magnetic tape that causes you most of your problems. However direct to disk mastering never really caught on. Even the new Beta-HiFi challenges CD's -Ron