I am in the same boat as the OP. For 12 years, I have been slowly digitizing my LPs, about 3 or 4 per week. Until recently, the process was: Clean the LP > Record it to CD-R using a Marantz pro-sumer CD recorder, inserting track splits on the fly with the remote control (and often missing the right moment) > Rip the CD-R to my server. Obviously this is limited to 16/44. Six months ago, I got my Sweetvinyl Sugarcube SC-2. This reduces the clicks and pops, as well as digitizes the signal up to 24/192. However, as the software is still in development, it will not yet split tracks or send the digitized files to a server over a home network. The recordings land on an attached USB thumb drive. From there, you can load it onto a server, but you will have to tag and split the tracks somehow. Tagging I can do, although manual tagging is a PITA - I do it whenever dBPoweramp can't find the metadata of a digitized LP. Track splitting I lack the software to do. So I am impatiently waiting for the Sweetvinyl team to implement track splitting, which is promised.
Having heard dgarretson's digitized DSD files, I can vouch that they are nearly indistinguishable from the original LP. That said, dgarretson is also somewhat of a technical wiz, and knows how to put this stuff together and make it work well. I lack the time and knowledge for this sort of thing, so the Sugarcube is the answer for me, assuming they eventually deliver all the functionality they have promised.