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authorJosh Coalson <jcoalson@users.sourceforce.net>2006-11-20 16:45:37 +0000
committerJosh Coalson <jcoalson@users.sourceforce.net>2006-11-20 16:45:37 +0000
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<li><a href="http://www.digitalnetworksna.com/shop/_templates/item_main_Rio.asp?model=220&amp;cat=53">Rio Karma</a><!-- and Rio Chroma--></li>
<li>TrekStor's <a href="http://www.trekstor.de/en/products/detail_mp3.php?pid=66">Vibez</a></li>
</ul>
- <a name="review"><b>Reviews:</b></a>
- <br /><br />
- The main purpose of these reviews is to give an idea of how well particular devices support FLAC. Other subjective comments here are based on our general impressions and are not meant to be thorough or authoritative. We only review devices we have tested directly ourselves.
- <br /><br />
- <a name="review_rio_receiver"><a href="http://www.mock.com/receiver/"><b>Rio Reciever</b></a></a>: This little device is a hacker's dream. It plays audio over a network (Ethernet or HPNA) so it requires a PC to serve audio files. There are several open source clients available and since it boots its Linux distro over NFS you can write your own client. They're not made anymore but you can still find them on ebay. The main downsides: 1) small, hard-to-read LCD display; 2) FLAC support is only in third-party clients which take some work to set up.
- <br /><br />
+ <a name="review"><b>Reviews:</b></a><br />
+ <br />
+ The main purpose of these reviews is to give an idea of how well particular devices support FLAC. Other subjective comments here are based on our general impressions and are not meant to be thorough or authoritative. We only review devices we have tested directly ourselves.<br />
+ <br />
+ <a name="review_rio_receiver"><a href="http://www.mock.com/receiver/"><b>Rio Reciever</b></a></a>: This little device is a hacker's dream. It plays audio over a network (Ethernet or HPNA) so it requires a PC to serve audio files. There are several open source clients available and since it boots its Linux distro over NFS you can write your own client. They're not made anymore but you can still find them on ebay. The main downsides: 1) small, hard-to-read LCD display; 2) FLAC support is only in third-party clients which take some work to set up.<br />
+ <br />
<a name="review_squeezebox2"><a href="http://www.slimdevices.com/"><b>Squeezebox2</b></a></a>: A fantastic networked audio player. Has an excellent, easy-to-read vacuum fluorescent display, wired or wireless networking, optical and coax digital outs and analog out, a reputation for very high audio quality, multi-room synchronization, and a bunch of other features. The server-side software, SlimServer, is open-source, runs on Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, etc. and has an active community. FLAC support is excellent; nearly the full <a href="format.html#subset">subset</a> (e.g. sample rates up to 48kHz, 16- and 24-bits per sample) including all standard encoding modes are supported. Also supported are FLAC tags, automatic transcoding on the server of many audio formats to FLAC for transmission to the box, and external cuesheet support (internal cuesheet support is in the works).
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