Jump to content
  • The Computer Audiophile
    The Computer Audiophile

    The Future Of HiFi

    thumb.png

    I've been thinking quite a bit, over the last few months, about the future of high quality audio playback. In fact, I'm obsessed with this topic. I was born a music loving audiophile and I worked in enterprise information technology for a decade before starting CA. My passions for both music and technology are converging quickly to provide a better high quality experience. There has never been a better time to be a music aficionado who loves great sound quality and technology. I absolutely love the possibilities and can't wait for some of them to come to fruition. We are no longer limited by technology. The only limiting factor is our imaginations. If we can think it, we can do it.

     

    In the not to distant future we will be streaming lossless audio, in all relevant sample rates, directly to our main audio components from a Cloud music service provider such as WiMP or Qobuz. Music, playlists, ratings, and favorites will all be stored in the Cloud. Listeners will control playback with iOS and Android apps provided by their streaming service providers. Similar to a UPnP / DLNA control point, the apps will serve as a remote control and library curation and browsing tool. In the same fashion as Google's Cast functionality, no audio will be routed through the iOS or Android device. Music will stream directly to an audio component such as a music server, digital to digital interface converter, or digital to analog converter from the Cloud. Content not available from the streaming service providers can be uploaded, purchased elsewhere, and made available for streaming with simple in app authentication, or located on one's local network attached storage device. There are a couple products capable of very similar functionality right now, namely Sonos, Spotify Connect, and the Auralic Aries / Lightning platform, but there are major differences between where we are now and where we are headed. Only lossless CD quality streaming audio will be available in the short term. During this time, high resolution content will still be purchased through traditional outlets such as HDtracks, Acoustic Sounds, and the PonoMusic store.[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

     

     

    1-Pixel.png

     

     

    1-Pixel.png

     

    Past = Purchase | Present = Purchase / Subscription Hybrid | Future = Subscription

     

    Where We Are Now

     

    There's no need to discuss the traditional music purchasing model where consumers purchase a vinyl album or Compact Disc or download. That's the past. We all lived through it and understand the concept. I feel the same way about meteorologists discussing the weather on the 10/11 p.m. news. There's no need to cover the current day's weather. We all experienced it firsthand.

     

    Currently most computer audiophiles store their lossless music on a turnkey server such as an Aurender or Meridian Sooloos, or on internal hard drives, external USB / FireWire / Thunderbolt hard drives, and NAS devices. Audio is either sent over USB or Ethernet to a digital to analog converter (DAC) and on to the rest of the system. Music is purchased on physical disc and ripped or music is purchased and downloaded. Music playback and library curation is done with either a keyboard, mouse, and monitor combination or through an iOS / Android device. Some users rely on subscription services like Spotify or Beats to stream lossy 320 kbps music to iOS or Android devices for music discovery and convenience. This is a hybrid purchase / subscription model where the purchased music is lossless and the subscription music is lossy.

     

     

     

    Where We Are Going

     

    One thing that holds true for the future of HiFi playback is the number of options will continue to grow. There is no single solution to satisfy everyone all the time. My view of where we are going with the future of HiFi is based on a combination of my own research and my own wants / needs. The major changes coming to HiFi are all related to the declining lossless purchasing model in favor of a growing lossless subscription model. As subscription based listening expands, the need for local music storage contracts. In addition, when music storage is in the Cloud (subscription model) the apps used to control playback and curation of one's library may be provided by the Cloud music subscription service provider. Thus, where we store music and how we select music for playback will be dependent on a purchase or subscription model of music consumption.

     

    With the aforementioned ideas in mind, here is the future of high quality music playback.

     

    1. Music is obtained through the subscription model.
    2. All music is stored in the Cloud.

      1. This includes the user's music that's unavailable directly through a subscription service such as little Jonny's piano recital recorded with an iPhone from row thirty-five in the school gymnasium.
      2. Until all content can be stored in the Cloud a hybrid approach will be required. This will enable users to stream from the Cloud and a local NAS or USB drive.
      3.  

        [*]All music is lossless CD quality or better.

        [*]Most custom HiFi apps are out, subscription service provider apps are in.

        1. Browsing one's library, selection of tracks for playback, and curating one's library is done through the music subscription service provider's iOS / Android app.
        2. HiFi companies can't keep up with the quality of subscription service provider's apps. WiMP has editorial teams in each country to deliver appropriate content via its app to end users. For example, one feature found in WiMP's Android app enables users to browse through its catalog and press & hold a track for additional information. This information includes metadata such as Composer, Lyricist, Producer, Mix Engineer, and Mastering Engineer, among others. The next version of WiMP's Android application will include an extension of this feature and enable users to select an item such as the Mastering Engineer's name. Once selected, all music in the WiMP catalog mastered by the Engineer will appear in the app. This functionality isn't too complex for HiFi companies to include within their own applications, but it's just a single example of a subscription service provider's constant improvement to stay ahead of the competition. Plus, WiMP is but one of the many companies offering streaming subscriptions to the HiFi market. Traditional HiFi companies can't keep updating their apps for every service provider's platform, let alone write the initial app for all the APIs (application programming interface). Every company has limited skill sets and resources. Most HiFi companies are better off sticking to HiFi components rather than iOS / Android design.

         

        [*]All music is sent directly from the Cloud to a HiFi component without traversing through the remote control iOS or Android device.

        1. AirPlay is dead. Streaming through one's iPhone eats up too much battery and depends on the state of the iPhone to continue playback.
        2. Using Google's Cast type functionality enables the remote control to be in any state, including turned off, and the music remains playing as instructed previously by the user.
        3. A small Raspberry Pi or similar device can be used to connect the Cloud with HiFi components.

         

        [*]The only computers involved will be the remote control running Apple's iOS or Google's Android operating systems and the audio component receiving the streaming content (likely running Linux).

        No solution exists today that addresses all of the aforementioned items. However, some of the items are available in limited form in a limited number of countries right now. The key to all of this is integration with HiFi companies and components. In the portable listening environment one can already stream and download lossless CD quality music to an iPhone or Android device. This is due to the simplicity of the environment. The music is, for all intents and purposes, meant to stay on the portable device. Integration with HiFi components is much trickier, but it's the key to lossless streaming adoption. Currently I can stream lossless CD quality with a computer running WiMP connected via USB to my main audio system or through a Sonos Connect wired to my main system. The problem with these partial solutions is that they have major weaknesses. I don't want a keyboard, mouse and monitor to play music because there's no remote for controlling the OS X WiMP app and there never will be such a remote, it doesn't make sense. Sonos can stream lossless music from WiMP but the Sonos iOS app isn't nearly as good as the native WiMP application. The hybrid solution that will take us to the next level will combine the local music library access of the Sonos app with the advanced features of the native WiMP app and Google Cast type functionality to stream music directly to the HiFi system. To a certain extent this would be like a Meridian Sooloos, which has had the most advanced metadata and navigation in the HiFi industry for many years, with music stored in the Cloud.

         

        Bridging the gap between the present and the future are products like the Auralic Aries. The term bridging the gap commonly refers to a temporary solution. However, the Aries will likely be the end game for many HiFi enthusiasts. The Aries and its Lightning iOS app enables access to a local UPnP / DLNA server content and the ability to browse & search Cloud content from WiMP and Qobuz. This concept is the reverse of my dream scenario of using the WiMP app with local access because the Lightning app focusses on local content with a Cloud content add-on. Even though the Lightning concept is reverse of my preference, this doesn't mean the app has problems. It's still terrific. Missing in the Lightning app are advanced metadata features for Cloud music, geo-targeted editorial content from WiMP, and a few other very minor items. The Sonos WiMP integration, as mentioned above, has more friction than I like. Meaning, it isn't a smooth experience because Sonos wants its users to create "Sonos Favorites & Playlists" and "Sonos Everything" rather than just creating favorites within WiMP that are available in any WiMP interface. Sonos must function the way it does due to its integration model and the fact it seeks to be the single interface for music playback. Enabling Sonos Playlists allows users to integrate WiMP content and local content into a single playlist. It's a really cool feature, but not a feature I use frequently. I much prefer my playlists be available everywhere through the WiMP app as that's my end game playback concept.

         

        Spotify Connect is the closest thing to my ideal concept in that it enables users to use the Spotify iOS app and send audio directly from the Cloud to an audio device without routing through the iOS device. Spotify playlists are all stored in the Cloud and available on all devices capable of Spotify playback. Some HiFi components like BlueSound are Spotify Connect enabled. However, the big show stopper is that Spotify is lossy. Spotify doesn't offer CD quality lossless streaming or downloads. Without the same, or better, quality as my local collection or WiMP, I'm not willing to use Spotify for this very convenient feature.

         

        iTunes users are likely interested in how AirPlay competes in this future of HiFi playback. In AirPlay's current state it just can’t compete. Routing music through a mobile device for playback on a HiFi system doesn't make sense, unless it's for casual group playback with friends. AirPlay diminishes battery life, requires the iOS device to be on or in a certain state, requires open source "hacked" software or Apple certification, and is as closed as any platform available today. AirPlay is dead without a serious overhaul.

         

         

         

        Conclusion

         

         

        We've been through the worst of times with the transition of mainstream playback from lossless CD quality to lossy MP3 quality. It's finally time to bring back lossless CD quality and move studio master quality from the class market to the mass market. Technology is no longer a barrier to great HiFi playback. Access to more music than Joe Sixpack could ever store at home, all in CD quality or better, is a HiFI and music aficionado's dream. Much of this dream is either a reality now or will soon be a reality for many listeners around the world. Services such as WiMP and Qobuz are strongly rumored to be coming to America and other countries this fall (2014). A few years ago listeners switching from physical Compact Discs to file based playback were overjoyed with access to their complete music collections at their fingertips. In a few months these listeners should be blown away with access to over 20 million lossless tracks for the price of purchasing a couple albums. Soon the traditional HiFi manufacturers and audio engineers can get back to what they do best, design the best performing audio gear in the world, rather than attempt to enter the realm of Apple and mobile app designers. Everyone has a speciality. Letting software developers employed by companies like WiMP lead the application charge while HiFi legends stick to bringing us better sound quality will spring our wonderful hobby into the future sooner rather than later. There has never been a more exciting time to love great music and great sound quality.

         

         

         

         

         

         

        Links

         

        WiMP

        Qobuz

        Sonos

        Spotify

        Aurender

        Meridian Sooloos

        Auralic

        HDtracks

        Acoustic Sounds

        PonoMusic

        Beats

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

        1-Pixel.png

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

        1-Pixel.png




    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Think of it as an AirPort Express type of HiFi product that talks directly with streaming services. No user interface is available on the HiFi product. The WiMP app is only a control much like the Television remote control.

    My Astell & Kern AK240 can talk directly with streaming services, but I don't use any streaming services because I simply have no need for them right now. I don't see how this would change in the near future, whereas the user interface of the AK240 does have my seal of approval.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Subscription service will be fairly common but it is unlikely to take over in the U.S. Mostly for geographical reasons. For example, I'm fairly rural, and having just tested my connection speed it comes up 15.44Mbps Down, 2.12Mbps up Not all that fast. Fast enough for Netflix, in a house of 1, multiple streams - in a family of 4? No. We're fighting the Net Neutrality thing at the moment - Netflix is now paying for higher speeds, which means at some point in the future I'll be paying for higher speeds (which I won't get). I suspect that most streamers will end up paying for additional (and in some cases non-existent) bandwidth improvements. Such is the nature of Crony Capitalism. The backbone carriers and ISP's use regulation to first seek monopoly protections, then seek changes to their categorization from public carrier to data service. Part of that is predatory use of regulation as a barrier to entry, part of it is fancy footwork to justify rate hikes. If the US had actually deregulated the phone system back when everyone though breaking up Bell was deregulation, then I think things would have shaken out much differently - not sure if it would have been better or worse and I don't plan to spend the time trying to figure it out - it is what it is. You can be sure, that in the current environment, additional laws and regulations covering streaming, subscriptions, and bandwidth will be coming.

     

    In any event, I'm likely to become more rural not less. Yes, urban is the trend, we're adding roughly 1.5% annual to urban centers world wide, in 2008 more than half the world population lived in urban centers. Most of the streaming technology advances are targeted to those areas as they provide the largest return on $ investment. Rural populations are declining, giving companies even less incentive to invest capital into those areas. As urbanization continues and there is no projected slowing as far out as 2050 that I can find, the demand and usage of available bandwidth will require additional infrastructure, which is both expensive (in a capital sense as well as a regulatory one), and time consuming. There will be technological advances that will allow the existing infrastructure to handle greater loads, but that path is likely to be cost effective for only so long, it will hit diminishing returns. For those of us going rural, trying to escape the over crowed cities, the incessant traffic and the noise and light pollution (not to mention the more noxious kind), the future of high bandwidth subscription looks a great deal less rosy.

     

    Another issue to consider is the reliance on a third party. What happens when WiMP or Spotify go out of business - and yes that could happen - it's happened to much bigger companies. Sure you'll find another supplier, but will your playlists transfer? Will it work with your hardware with out having to wait for the supplier to write new software? Or will you need to upgrade hardware. I'll give you one really chilling feature of cloud backups - more than one company filed for bankruptcy, the courts ceased the assets and the clients were unable to access their files, in one case it took several years to get things moving - not solved - just moving. A subscription service, where you don't actually OWN anything would have a much smaller impact, but don't assume it will be a minor blip.

     

    In terms of Source Providers (record companies - assuming they say alive) a subscription service is a much more controllable business model than what they've been dealing with - starting with the first pirated MP3 files though Napster, and continuing on though bit torrent and other peer to peer sharing services. If all the music is coming from the studios to the streaming providers to you - well I suspect the studios will be fine with that, don't expect the prices to remain as low as they are as the streaming business strangles the sales of CD's more than it already has.

     

    There is no doubt - we live in interesting times.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Chris,

     

    Future of HiFi is here mainly future of music.

     

    Future of HiFi gear is the second part of the puzzle, about which I will be happy to have your highly respected opinion (I had not the courage to read in detail all the numerous former posts of this very long thread, so sorry when I am redundant).

     

    By the way a complete dematerialization will impact severely manufacturers - magic of the product and smart marketing saved the vinyl but it will be certainly more difficult for digital pancakes ;)

     

    Elarging my comment about your on-going review of the integrated DEVIALET 400 monos (I posted on the BA RS DAC thread), I observe that a lot of innovative solutions/devices are developped by HiFi forerunners but with a different level of maturity however. Fo non-specialists, at least, it generates many questions when you want to buy for the first time/upgrade HiFi gear.

     

    What is the (technical) real value/durability of those innovations, for which profile, use and budget, is it a true improvement and smart buy?

     

    As an example, one of the most innovative product I notice during 2014 on the mid and upper segment of HiFi market is the all-in one well named German made "AKTIV-BOX AVANTGARDE ACOUSTIC ZERO 1 PRO". This product is already acclaimed in lot of reviews... in Germany.

     

    A fully independent analysis will help to know when it (and some other declared revolutionary technics and devices) can actually sustain/announce the future of HiFi also.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Subscription service will be fairly common but it is unlikely to take over in the U.S. Mostly for geographical reasons. For example, I'm fairly rural, and having just tested my connection speed it comes up 15.44Mbps Down, 2.12Mbps up Not all that fast. [...]

    There is no doubt - we live in interesting times.

     

    Very nice post, NotRick. Probably I won't always live in the city and I seriously doubt if I will be well served by network services in the country.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Guest
    This is now closed for further comments




×
×
  • Create New...