Hi Clifford.  This sounds great!
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Clifford Blackwell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2005 11:26 AM
Subject: new computer/stereo interface-no accessibility though.


This sounds very cool, but I suppose there is no possibility of making it 
accessible.

October 27, 2005
David Pogue
Rip and Burn and Download on a Stereo
JUST because a bunch of individual ingredients are delicious doesn't mean 
they'll taste good when they're all cooked up together. Ask anyone who's 
ever sampled a 5-year-old chef's rendition of chocolate chip spaghetti with 
meat sauce and grape jelly.

Similarly, many an electronics company has tried and failed to slap together 
a decent product from buzzword-compliant components - say, iPods, wireless 
networks, sound systems and personal computers.

So you might not have high hopes for the Olive Symphony, a $900 hi-fi 
component (www.olive.us) that merges all of those technologies and more. But 
instead of creating a multiheaded digital Frankenstereo, the company managed 
to make all of those technologies and features feel natural together. The 
resulting box takes a long time to describe, because it does so much. But it 
takes surprisingly little time to master, and most of its features are 
usable whether you own a computer or not.

If you're looking for a one-line description, well, think of the Symphony as 
an iPod for your stereo. Inside is a completely silent, fanless, 80-gigabyte 
hard drive that stores up to 20,000 songs. (A 160-gigabyte model, the 
Musica, is available for $1,100. It has a fan, but you'd practically have to 
climb inside the thing to hear it.) The back panel has both analog and 
digital outputs to your sound system.

The front panel's scroll wheel and bright, monochrome screen permit quick 
navigation through gigantic music collections by song title, playlist, album 
name and so on.

Now, Olive isn't the first company to invent a stereo component with a hard 
drive. What makes the Symphony, which will be shipped to stores next week, 
so interesting is all the different ways music gets onto and off of it.

Take the built-in CD player, for example. When you slip a CD into the slot 
and press the glowing Play button, the music begins. The song and band names 
appear on the screen in huge letters, visible from across the room, courtesy 
of the machine's built-in two-million-album database of album and track 
names.

By pressing one button, you can copy the CD onto the Symphony's hard drive. 
The process takes about 45 seconds a song; you choose the audio format and 
quality setting. (You get the quoted 20,000-song capacity only with the MP3 
format, which is not exactly the audiophile's dream. Choose WAV, AIFF or 
FLAC for better quality. These are lossless formats - meaning "adored by 
classical music nuts"- that fill up the hard drive much faster. The Symphony 
stores about 2,000 songs in FLAC format.)

And what if you have 1,200 CD's? Are you really expected to sit there, 
drumming your fingers, feeding the box another disc every nine minutes?

Don't be silly. Olive has made an offer you can't refuse: it will preload 
all of your CD's onto a new Symphony's hard drive. You just pay for one-way 
shipping for the discs. (This offer is good until at least Jan. 1, 2006. 
Even after that, the service will always be available, but it won't always 
be free.)

The Symphony box can also rescue your old records and tapes. If you're 
willing to connect your tape deck or record player to the Symphony, it can 
turn each song into a full-blown digital track that behaves just like the 
songs you've copied from a CD.

Once your music collection is safely ensconced on the Symphony, you can 
exile the original CD's, tapes and records to the attic. From now on, you 
can call up any album right on the screen. You can also mix and match tracks 
into playlists of your own. Better yet, the Symphony's CD player is also a 
CD recorder, so you can burn your music - including the tunes you've rescued 
from your old tapes and LP's - onto shiny new CD's.

If your head hasn't yet exploded, there's more: you can also connect an iPod 
or any MP3 player directly to a U.S.B. jack on the Symphony (which also 
recharges the player). Amazingly, the iPod's own music collection now 
appears on the Symphony's screen, ready for playing through your stereo 
system. (The Symphony does not, however, play copy-protected files, like 
songs from the iTunes music store.) You can also copy music from the 
Symphony's hard drive to the iPod, thus getting extra mileage from all the 
work you (or Olive) did in transferring your CD collection. That is, the 
Symphony box lets you load and manage an iPod even if you don't own a 
computer - an industry first.

In fact, the Symphony doesn't even wipe out all of the music that's already 
on the iPod; it's content to add, not replace. Over all, this 
Symphony-to-iPod copying business is a pretty slick trick. (With the new 
video iPod, it's a trick that needs work. In my tests, copying songs from 
the Symphony had the bizarre side effect of stripping away all the video 
from the iPod's TV shows, leaving only the audio. The company promises a fix 
within days.)

Even this, however, is not the end of the Symphony's résumé. It also has a 
wireless (Wi-Fi) network antenna, so that it can join your home network. 
Suddenly, there are all kinds of other possibilities.

For example, suppose you keep your music collection in iTunes (the free 
jukebox software) on your Mac or PC upstairs. That music library shows up on 
the Symphony box, ready to play on your much nicer sound system downstairs.

In fact, the same stunt works in reverse: the Symphony also shows up as an 
icon in the iTunes software, so that you can play its music collection on 
your computer. In this age of copy-protection paranoia, you just wouldn't 
expect to find this sort of flexibility and simplicity.

Network nerds will be even more impressed to learn that the Symphony is not 
just a Wi-Fi receiver; it's also a full-blown access point (wireless router) 
in its own right. That is, if you plug a cable or D.S.L. modem into the back 
panel, all wireless laptops in the house can share its fast Internet 
connection. Not yet wireless? Stand back: the Symphony is even a four-port 
Ethernet router. You can plug four computers directly into it to create a 
network.

What does all this mean to non-geeks? Simply that the Symphony box and your 
computers can play each other's music collections across a home network. You 
can also drag music files directly from your computer to the Symphony's hard 
drive. You can even use your computer's keyboard to manage song names and 
playlists; the Symphony's playlist-management software appears in, of all 
things, your Web browser.

(Olive also supplies a dedicated, more elegant playlist-management program 
for Mac OS X only.)

Those networking features also mean that the Symphony can be linked to the 
Internet, making it easy to download to the box new features and updates of 
CD track names on new albums.

Finally, the Internet connection also permits the Symphony to tune into 
Internet radio stations. Over 1,000 are listed when you open the package, 
organized by genre, and you can add your own.

Clearly, this is a machine with vast potential for musical pleasure - and 
for confusion. In general, the simple, iPoddish, 
drill-down-to-the-right-menu system keeps all these features easy to find. 
There's plenty to learn and troubleshoot, however, especially at the outset.

For example, adding this or any machine to a wireless network can be an 
evening-long headache, especially because you have to tap in your network 
password using the remote's number pad. Copying songs from a CD seems quick, 
but a very long period of post-processing is required before they're 
available for playback on your computer or copying to your iPod. And 
although the machine itself is sleek, black and beautiful (the more 
expensive Musica is silver), the remote control is a surprisingly cheesy, 
plastic, nonilluminated afterthought.

But Olive has big plans for its audio system. For example, in December it 
intends to offer a companion device called the Sonata ($200), a small, 
wireless receiver that hooks up to speakers or even to clock radios. You can 
park Sonatas in up to 20 rooms of the house; each can be playing different 
music from the Symphony's hard drive.

So, no, you can't mash together a bunch of trendy ingredients and expect to 
produce a successful dish. But a master chef can create a triumphant whole 
even from a disparate jumble of different ingredients - just as long as one 
of them is an Olive.

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

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