As for ease-of-use, I like my current setup, but I guess you guys would consider it a turn key system. It comprises a Mac Mini, an AppleTV, and a couple of AirportExpress stations (each located in different rooms) .
Everything is connected through WiFi so I rip CDs using Apple lossless on the Mac Mini and then I can access the music tracks from the AppleTV or the Airport Extreme. In the case of the AppleTV, it looks like iTunes on the TV. In the case of the Airport Extreme, I use my iPhone as the remote to 'see' and control what's playing. Both the AppleTV and Airport Extreme have digital optical output. In the case of the AppleTV the digital signal goes into an Anthem D2 processor, which upsamples to 192 kHz and has a pretty good DAC section. In the case of the two Airport Extremes, the digital signals go into Pioneer Elite and Harmon/Kardon receivers.
Here's my quick pros and cons for this setup.
Pros
1. At the risk of sounding like an Apple commercial, it just works. Both the AppleTV and iPhone/Airport Extreme interfaces are very easy to use and work 'right out of the box.' I used to have a MediaCenter PC and while it worked out of the box, shortly thereafter it became a major headache (virus software, windows updates, crashes, etc.). While iTunes doesn't do everything as efficiently as I would like, it's easy for me to navigate and find what I want.
2. Video on the AppleTV is easy too. Call up the iTunes store on the TV screen and download movies or tv shows. Some are available in HD.
3. The (loud) Mac Mini is in a different room from where we listen and watch so there's no fan noise.
Cons
1. In the case of the Airport Extreme stations, there is no hard disk, so the music must stream from the Mac Mini. Occasionally there are drops. I also don't know what the streaming does to the integrity of the audio, even if it's ripped in lossless format. This problem goes away with the AppleTV since there's a hard disk and the full Apple lossless files are stored locally.
2. I've read somewhere that optical digital is not has good as S/PDIF. I'm not sure if that's only over long cable runs or what, but the Apple products only have optical (or analog) output.
3. The HDMI output from the AppleTV does not work with the Anthem processor. For some reason the handshake doesn't work and Anthem has yet to address the problem.
Anyway, there's another easy option, if anyone is interested.
Everything is connected through WiFi so I rip CDs using Apple lossless on the Mac Mini and then I can access the music tracks from the AppleTV or the Airport Extreme. In the case of the AppleTV, it looks like iTunes on the TV. In the case of the Airport Extreme, I use my iPhone as the remote to 'see' and control what's playing. Both the AppleTV and Airport Extreme have digital optical output. In the case of the AppleTV the digital signal goes into an Anthem D2 processor, which upsamples to 192 kHz and has a pretty good DAC section. In the case of the two Airport Extremes, the digital signals go into Pioneer Elite and Harmon/Kardon receivers.
Here's my quick pros and cons for this setup.
Pros
1. At the risk of sounding like an Apple commercial, it just works. Both the AppleTV and iPhone/Airport Extreme interfaces are very easy to use and work 'right out of the box.' I used to have a MediaCenter PC and while it worked out of the box, shortly thereafter it became a major headache (virus software, windows updates, crashes, etc.). While iTunes doesn't do everything as efficiently as I would like, it's easy for me to navigate and find what I want.
2. Video on the AppleTV is easy too. Call up the iTunes store on the TV screen and download movies or tv shows. Some are available in HD.
3. The (loud) Mac Mini is in a different room from where we listen and watch so there's no fan noise.
Cons
1. In the case of the Airport Extreme stations, there is no hard disk, so the music must stream from the Mac Mini. Occasionally there are drops. I also don't know what the streaming does to the integrity of the audio, even if it's ripped in lossless format. This problem goes away with the AppleTV since there's a hard disk and the full Apple lossless files are stored locally.
2. I've read somewhere that optical digital is not has good as S/PDIF. I'm not sure if that's only over long cable runs or what, but the Apple products only have optical (or analog) output.
3. The HDMI output from the AppleTV does not work with the Anthem processor. For some reason the handshake doesn't work and Anthem has yet to address the problem.
Anyway, there's another easy option, if anyone is interested.


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