You used USB for putting ATRAC files on the MD.
You used optical for recording in real time.
At the time you could get MD drives to hook up to a computer like a Zip drive, but hardly anyone bought them outside Japan.
( , Sat 20 Feb 2021, 22:10, Share, Reply)
You used optical for recording in real time.
At the time you could get MD drives to hook up to a computer like a Zip drive, but hardly anyone bought them outside Japan.
( , Sat 20 Feb 2021, 22:10, Share, Reply)
but analogue or optical real time recordings being transcoded to atrac
is a function of processor time not mechanical was my point i think - usb transfer is only shaving a few cycles from the process?
( , Sat 20 Feb 2021, 22:18, Share, Reply)
is a function of processor time not mechanical was my point i think - usb transfer is only shaving a few cycles from the process?
( , Sat 20 Feb 2021, 22:18, Share, Reply)
We're getting wires crossed.
ATRAC3 was used to fit vastly more audio on an MD than recording lossless PCM or original ATRAC. This effectively turned a Minidisc player into an MP3 player with removable storage.
If you wanted to do this you had to connect USB (before USB 2.0, mark you), and you had to use Sony's ATRAC3 format as well as their slow, shitty and generally unpleasant software.*
If you were hooked up to the optical in, you could only record in realtime but the quality was much better.
( , Sun 21 Feb 2021, 1:00, Share, Reply)
ATRAC3 was used to fit vastly more audio on an MD than recording lossless PCM or original ATRAC. This effectively turned a Minidisc player into an MP3 player with removable storage.
If you wanted to do this you had to connect USB (before USB 2.0, mark you), and you had to use Sony's ATRAC3 format as well as their slow, shitty and generally unpleasant software.*
If you were hooked up to the optical in, you could only record in realtime but the quality was much better.
( , Sun 21 Feb 2021, 1:00, Share, Reply)