2000F wrote:You are not 100% correct. 
Never said I was, & I have no real interest in ever being 100% correct, how boring. 
I understand your points mate, and yeah it doesn't belong in this thread (its a far more interesting topic still), for what its worth I went SAE as well (and Im aware of what bit depth & sampling rates relate to) and the main ting I took from it, was that specs dont matter, my ears do & my ears tell me vinyl 
sounds better (better being entirely subjective yeah) it dont have to look better on paper, we're not talkin fidelity in the sense of an accurate representation of acoustic sound, but in the sense of what does the music justice. 
2000F wrote:a digital reproduction of the analogue world (and therefore "lossy" in that sense only)
Thats exactlly how I meant bro. All digital encoding is lossy. 
Analog actually adds to your sounds (some people call it distortion), if I can find the disks I'll fling u some .TIFF files I converted to .WAV and recorded to 2 inch tape - heaviest bass I ever heard - .JPGs sound shit in case u were wondering. 
I kno fr a fact that digital files sound better (that word again) once they have been to vinyl. Sorry I cant back my 
facts up with figures or wotever, but I base my opinans on what I have heard in the real world, for myself. If you like I'll record some loops (24/96 of course, but via my inferior technics/vestax RIAA preamp) that where pressed on a lock groove 12" a few years back & I'll dig out the CD quality "masters" so u can compare, if I can find em (that disk again).
anyway. My intial post was more in dismay at peoples willingness to accept "inferior" or reduced sound quality in exchange for "ease of use". 
I personlly think that vinyl is a far more "involving" media, it encourages the listener to participate in listening, rather than sticking iTunes on shuffle and passivlly consuming. But thats taking the thread even more offtopic, so I'll stop now.
sorry bout the thread de-railment folks  
