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Audio Format Wars

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 5.2
  Total Words: 1301
  Total Characters: 6630
  Number of Sentences: 102


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 12.75
  Characters per Words: 5.1


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 65.07
  Fog Scale Level: 10.17
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 7.35  

Audio Format Wars


     By: Sheldon Khan


     Before buying a new car, getting married, or adopting a new audio format
it is wise to ask a few questions, peer under the hood, and ask the advice of
someone you trust.  Will the new format satisfy your needs not only now but,
also in the future?  Will it look (and sound) as good on all the mornings after
you first met?
     The analogue cassette is an old and trusted versatile friend  that went
with you on those morning jogs and cruised in the car with you on Friday nights.
However, the powers that be, have declared our trusted friend to be in the last
phase of the life cycle.  It's successor must sound better, work better, and
have new features such as a digital display for song titles.  There are
currently two formats competing to be the consumers next choice for sound on the
go.  They are Philips' Digital Compact Cassette (DCC) and Sony's Mini Disc (MD).
     What exactly is digital recording?  The definition is, "An electronic
format that is designed to duplicate sound, while affording extremely accurate
control over any changes you might wish to make in the recording" (Mclan &
Wichman,1988).  In simple terms it means that the digital circuitry samples the
signal and then reproduces what it has seen.  The quality of the recording
depends on the sampling rate of the machine.  The sampled signal is then encoded
to the tape or disc in 1's and 0's, just like a computer disk drive would encode
information.  However, the biggest advantage of digital recording is the fact
that it eliminates tape "hiss" that is usually found present in analogue
recordings.
     In the Eighties, a Philips invention captured the limelight.  The
Compact Disc introduced us to a new era of digital sound, or  "perfect sound."
In the nineties another Philips invention has taken centre-stage, the Digital
Compact Cassette (DCC).  DCC is the marriage of the analogue cassette to Digital
Audio. Together they form a union that combin...

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