If you had to start all over again in this day and age


So, with the advent of different technology, sources and platforms these days, if you had to build your home stereo system all over again, what would you purchase to listen to music that brings you satisfaction?

How much of what you have would you keep, change or throw all out and start over again?
arro222
Generally, no, streaming services to the types of streamer dacs we’re talking about here for home 2ch listening always require an internet connection to play the songs. So you do not "own" the songs if that’s what you mean - but so long as you keep your subscription you can play anything from their vast catalog. I think some services do allow download (e.g., to your phone) and play without an internet connection, but your subscription must still be active (once it expires, those songs won’t play). It’s just that most of the types of streamer dacs described above don’t have way to store. (I hope I’m right about this - if I’m wrong someone will correct.)


I like streaming because it gives me access to vast quantities of music, and it curates them by genre. So, for example, I like blues. I listen to a lot of Albert King, Muddy Waters, Keb Mo, Taj Mahal, Luther Allison, Buddy Guy -- all pretty well known artists. But with Tidal, I go to "Tidal Recommends" for blues and I have access to tons of blues artists I’m not familiar with, and I can listen to any of them any time. It leads to infinitely more time spent listening. That’s the best benefit of streaming, IMO. And it’s CD quality or better if you use Tidal/Qobuz and have a decent player. With Hi Res (different services call it different names) you can do better than CD quality. Will it ever better a high-end vinyl setup? Maybe not today. But down the road, who knows. What lots of folks who have hi-end vinyl setups do is use streaming to identify those albums they want to purchase on vinyl.

Not all streaming services are created equal. Spotify has a free version but the quality is low (resolution). Tidal and Qobuz are the two high-quality leaders, and Amazon has become a new contender, but is not supported yet by many players (Bluesound an exception and maybe couple others).


Establishing an account with a streaming service will involve creating an username and password, that you’ll enter once into your streamer initially, and thereafter it’ll find it automatically each time you power on.


Also, not all players (streamers, dacs, or combo units that have both) obviously are created equally. Not all will play at the highest resolutions supported by the streaming services.


Regarding the dac in your cd player, depending on how good it is you may be better off going with a combination dac/streamer. Besides convenience and fewer cables, everything in digital domain runs off clocks and when you have more devices (like streamer and cd dac) involved there is more opportunity for jitter to degrade the sound quality. That said, if your cd dac is decent, it may outperform the dac in the Bluesound node 2i. Dacs/Streamers improve quickly, as in audio terms/timelines this is a pretty fast moving technology (compared to speakers, for example). The dacs 5 years from now will be markedly better than what we have today. That’s a good thing.



Yes, like everything in audio, prices go from low to nosebleed high. You can find dacs costing $100k if you look hard enough.
I would do everything exactly the same. Never regret, never apologize. 
Acquired 500 records in the 70s which are some of the best I have. Went through all the formats. Back to vinyl but still listen to CDs, digital, streaming. 
Loved the journey of trying to figure out how to acquire next component and what sound I like, which has changed from decade to decade. 

“I'm a chicken to move toward streaming. It took me years to get a cd player. To me an audio system is still about a tt, a player and a good ole single ended.“

I was there not long ago. During this pandemic I wanted a project so I ordered a hifiberry dac plus DSP $70 and a Raspberry Pi 4 $60. Another $10 for a heat sink case, a few bucks to download Volumio, and you are in business. Initially I attempted to build a Squeezebox type of thing with a screen, but realized this was overkill. I took an old iPhone and use it with Volumio app as my front end.  So far, the ease of selecting a wide variety of music and HD downloads points towards success. I had some help from kind folks on here to get through the software portion, but if I had just read thoroughly that could have been minimized. It doesn’t have a $400 glitzy case or front panel with pretty lights, but you won’t regret the $140 cash outlay, and the whole unit can hide in a small part of your rack. Don’t over complicate this as I did. Simple is good. If you need help, let me know. 
Thanks ovine. Although my knowledge of traditional equipment and its innards and tech has done me and my customers well throughout the years, I know next to nothing of this new digital stuff.
I understood "dac" and "case" in your post but I have no clue what a Pi 4 is nor "volumio" or where to download it on.

You know what is really putting me off on this streaming stuff? I can’t own the music. My tastes in music run rather tight. I am NOT an "overall" music lover by any means. "Hip-Hop" or "Rap" will never see the inside of this house ( except for one very hauntingly beautiful rap I heard as a prelude to a Blue Man Group show) as well as Michael Bolton or Barry Manilow or Janis Joplin or Kenny G and God forbid, Alanis Morrisette.

I have bought entire albums for just one song. There are only a few classical reproductions I like. In short, I’m rather "selective" with most of my preference in note structure associated with minor cord grouping.

It makes me wonder if this whole streaming thing is right for a person such as myself as opposed to finding a song, buying it for $1.99, burning it on a cd and playing it on what I consider a very good player.