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Dts 5.1 Driver
Download surround sound and lossless music DVD-Audio, DTS-CD, SACD, Audio-DVD, DTS 5.1, DVD, FLAC, APE Archive of surround sound and lossless music for free. Our site is dedicated to the new music industry - a surround music! Latihan soal dan pembahasan fisika kelas xi semester 2. On our website you can always find and download the best albums of your favorite artists in the most popular formats DVD-Audio, DTS 5.1, SACD-R. The site contains a selection of high-quality archive of music of different styles, all in amazing quality! Most surround processors can create a 5.1 mix on-the-fly. I use such processing for all stereo sources in my home theater, and it sounds excellent. IMO, there's certainly no need for 'faked' 5.1 versions burned to disc. My PC sound card also outputs a 5.1 channel DTS signal from all sources, whether mono, stereo, or surround.
DTS Entertainment
The VLC player must understand the DTS 5.1 bitstream, and decode it.
DTS is 5.1 bitstream data on normal CDs. They're really CD-ROMs which contain compressed data, not normal 2 channel audio CDs which contain 2 channel PCM audio.
I can't really answer your question for a Mac solution.
I have many DTS CDs and import them as Apple Lossless (which reduces the data in iTunes to around 1270 kbs from 1440 kbs), then stream them via an Airport Express to my Home Theatre reciever via optical output. The Receiver (Yamaha RX-V2700) decodes the DTS 5.1 audio perfectly.
This is the only way to listen to DTS 5.1 natively. Audio on the iMac won't work, neither will the analog outputs on the Airport Express. Just noise, as it's a data stream, not normal 2 channel PCM audio.
What I would do in your situation is to play the DTS CDs on a normal DVD player with a built-in DTS decoder, set to 2 channel analog output, let the DVD player do a 5.1 to stereo downmix, then input this analog output to the Mac, and record the stereo 2 channel audio signal in realtime. Re-digitize and import this back into iTunes or whatever music programme you're using on the Mac.
Otherwise, just continue to use the PC option if you can.
Craig.
DTS is 5.1 bitstream data on normal CDs. They're really CD-ROMs which contain compressed data, not normal 2 channel audio CDs which contain 2 channel PCM audio.
I can't really answer your question for a Mac solution.
I have many DTS CDs and import them as Apple Lossless (which reduces the data in iTunes to around 1270 kbs from 1440 kbs), then stream them via an Airport Express to my Home Theatre reciever via optical output. The Receiver (Yamaha RX-V2700) decodes the DTS 5.1 audio perfectly.
This is the only way to listen to DTS 5.1 natively. Audio on the iMac won't work, neither will the analog outputs on the Airport Express. Just noise, as it's a data stream, not normal 2 channel PCM audio.
What I would do in your situation is to play the DTS CDs on a normal DVD player with a built-in DTS decoder, set to 2 channel analog output, let the DVD player do a 5.1 to stereo downmix, then input this analog output to the Mac, and record the stereo 2 channel audio signal in realtime. Re-digitize and import this back into iTunes or whatever music programme you're using on the Mac.
Otherwise, just continue to use the PC option if you can.
Craig.
Difference Between DTS CD And DVD-Audio?
Sep 12, 2009 8:37 PM