CarlitosNo wrote:zeroart wrote:as far as the preservation of digital audio goes (or any digital information for that matter), i think it's important for people to realize that as long as they support closed formats in the digital domain, this is always going to be a problem. please support open platforms and software and this is a very solvable problem. if open platforms and software are used nobody can ever "hide the goods" or "force change" of a subsystem. it will also mean that as long as there are electronic/computer engineers there will be a way to decode and manipulate digital data elements through real-time dsp algorithms.
I may be totally wrong here, but... if the main point of using an analog medium is a long lasting storage medium for the audio, wouldn't a world of open formats be a hell in terms of compatibility? I mean, if there are already formats that are impossible to play back, what would happen if anyone could have their own platforms/formats? I tend to think that uniformity is a necessary bad in the digital domain...
an open platform would mean that all source and specs are known. if this be the case, then the format would never be dead. it would always be alive. which is why i say that as long as there are electronic/computer engineers, there will be a way to playback anything recorded in the open format. the same can be said for any digital information/data. you can write/design it yourself if need be.
closed design and standards are here to force you to buy the "next upgrade" or lock you into one specific format, which in turn brings up steve's gripe. once you choose to record in a closed standard with source not known for decoding, you are screwed, unless of course you buy the next backwards compatible device which probably is offered by the same company and only comes out when the company needs to make payroll for a few more years. if said company goes under, it will be the responsibility of the owners/technicians of the devices to keep them up to par so decoding/playback can happen in the future because the source code to said decoder or platform is not known to the community. hence, open formats being a good thing. open "standards" being even better.