... Plenty of patience for discussing the theory!
I have driven myself mad trying to tell the difference, for instance, between 92kh and 192khz. As if it isn't bad enough, above a certain point, trying to tell different bit-rates of lossy file formats apart.
It is interesting to look at wave forms and spectrum. I wish I could read spectrum diagrams, but at least they can show that there is a difference. Of course, two waves, one inverted, cancelling, is a pretty good test of there being no difference.
ranjeetrain said:
I think this is where the reason lies. Squeezebox, if using wireless, due to higher bandwidth required by FLAC media, must be experiencing a huge amount of jitter. And that's what you may have heard.
Jitter doesn't count while the data is still data, ie, in the digital domain. There's a reference for this, but I'd find it hard to put my finger on the link without a search --- so, so long as the wifi network succeeds in its job of getting
all the data to the squeezebox, then, even though the source may be an internet radio station on the other side of the world, it does not create jitter. It does, occasionally, drop out just because the buffers are not filling fast enough, but if that happens when the source is the local PC, wifi troubleshooting is called for.
I do most of my music listening, these days, late-night, with headphones direct from the PC interface, so my squeezebox does not get much use --- but they are good at doing what they do!