First off, apologies if this is a silly question, but I am not familiar enough with computer architecture and hardware-software interface to know the answer.
Simply stated, under which circumstances is a high quality sound card beneficial? For example, when I rip an audio CD to my hard drive, I would expect that the conversion would be digital info into the dBpowerAMP music converter for software conversion, with the sound card playing no role in the conversion. Is that correct? Likewise, when I am converting a flac for playback, I would expect that the conversion would be a software conversion by the dBpowerAMP audio player, rather than the 24-bit decoding available on my sound card. Do I have it wrong? Finally, I would expect that a direct CD drive to sound card digital connection would not be necessary unless I wanted to play audio CDs directly through the sound card, without using dBpowerAMP. Does this all make sense to you folks?
I ask because in my version of the house of the future I have my flac files loaded onto an external HD connected to an otherwise unused networked computer that functions as a server for my home network. Three of our computers have Audigy 2 cards, including the laptop (no fan) that feeds into my main entertainment center. My newest computer has only a stock sound card, and I thought I should take a quick reality check before I upgrade it, given that I never play back music on this particular computer, but often use it to convert audio CDs to flac files.
I hope these questions make sense, and any guidance will be greatly appreciated.
Simply stated, under which circumstances is a high quality sound card beneficial? For example, when I rip an audio CD to my hard drive, I would expect that the conversion would be digital info into the dBpowerAMP music converter for software conversion, with the sound card playing no role in the conversion. Is that correct? Likewise, when I am converting a flac for playback, I would expect that the conversion would be a software conversion by the dBpowerAMP audio player, rather than the 24-bit decoding available on my sound card. Do I have it wrong? Finally, I would expect that a direct CD drive to sound card digital connection would not be necessary unless I wanted to play audio CDs directly through the sound card, without using dBpowerAMP. Does this all make sense to you folks?
I ask because in my version of the house of the future I have my flac files loaded onto an external HD connected to an otherwise unused networked computer that functions as a server for my home network. Three of our computers have Audigy 2 cards, including the laptop (no fan) that feeds into my main entertainment center. My newest computer has only a stock sound card, and I thought I should take a quick reality check before I upgrade it, given that I never play back music on this particular computer, but often use it to convert audio CDs to flac files.
I hope these questions make sense, and any guidance will be greatly appreciated.
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