Will audio streaming devices push out computer audio?


Just wondering what everyone thinks. There are many audio companies making streaming devices, some even allow the use of hdd, nas devices with music files. Sony, Marantz, Aurender, Bluesound, Sonos, Cocktail Audio, Bryston and others. Will these devices push out computer audio? Will they get better with time and push out turntables?
Will digital make albums obsolete......with time?
128x1282psyop

I think that streaming will become what most people use. You will be able to buy downloads if you want, but why buy a download if you can always stream the same album with the same quality?

Bandwidth for streaming and storage capacity keeps increasing for the streaming sources while cost continues to go down. My internet provider allows me over a terabyte of data a month now.

They have the thorny problem of sorting out who gets paid what while keeping the service at a cost that listeners will pay, though. Musicians will have to get paid fairly for their work or they’ll quit recording music.

Digital sound quality will keep improving for a long time to come. No need to get into a digital vs analog discussion.

I think that artists will still want to make albums and people will still want to listen to them. There will always be a market for singles as well. The future of digital audio looks good to me.

On the contrary, the faster advancing digital technology enables computer audio. Physical media will be phased out. Audiophile nowadays are very lucky with streaming media. Like digital camera and film camera, digital audio will be the only survivor. No one is shoot film camera now. Audiophile equipment company will have to adopt the new technology. The so called cloud computing translates into music streaming.

Before albums you had 78’s. Albums became possible because of RIAA compression and electrical amplification and the 33 speed meant you could get close to an hour of music on two sides of vinyl.

Currently the CD is the physical media that determines an album (just over an hour or enough to fit Beethoven’s 5th)

Once physical media disappears then the concept of an album will likely whither and we go back to individual tracks like 78’s or complete performances of a work or live show in a digital package.

i just bought Otis Redding Live at the Whiskey in 96KHz 24 bit as one complete digital package with 65 tracks.... it is already happening.