Then BootCamp will successfully reparation the drive and install Windows for you. If you use a local disk, it goes quite fast. Simply boot into the recovery partition, wipe the disk, and restore it from time machine. There are occasional cases where a disk is far too fragmented to successfully re-partition, but this is both rare *and* easily handled. Bootcamp even takes a Windows ISO and puts it on a bootable USB stick for you, along with all the Apple drivers for Windows. (shrug) I have not met many MacOS users who have a problem doing that. What do you mean- reinstall "system" with bootcamp? Bootcamp is already in every MacOS install, and it is capable of re-partiioning the disk on the fly to build a bootcamp partition. So I suggested him to use Parallels instead. However, I have never seen any OS X user willing to reinstall system with bootcamp to try that no matter how hard I persuade them. Personally, I listen to my CD player instead of computer audio, but experiment various methods to at least try to equal what I hear from CD/SACD. If SavantGarde doesn't hear a difference, then native sampling rate playback is fine too.Ĭomparing the personal support of A+ and JRMC, I suggest you view posts from member jriver on these pages and draw your own conclusion. This page is a very good reference for upsampling in A+ for those that would like to try. Upsampling allows A+ to remove a haze/digititis that's present on standard playback. Sorry, should have just written plug-ins instead. Others seem to have similar experiences – just read the "Audirvana + 2.0" thread. "Sounds best upsampled 2x" doesn't seem to be an advantage.Īs regards the "Excellent responsive personal support", I have sent the developer a great many reports on bugs and inconsistencies of which as good as none have been addressed. Audio Unit plugins are supported, though. I don't think Audirvana Plus supports VST plugins (JRiver MC does).
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