evdplancke;669059 Wrote: > By ethernet jitter, I mean the fact that bits are not sent at a constant > rate. This kind of jitter is reduced by Qos by avoiding high prio > packets to be delayed by queues on the LAN (strict prio rule). > > This should make the processing power more stable, hence reducing > impact on jitter on digital audio stream. > > Of course this is a theory that should be validated by > experimentation. > > Sent from my GT-S5830 using Tapatalk
I'm sorry but this makes no sense at all. The "bits" are sent inside TCP packets and it doesn't matter at all how fast or slow those packets are transmitted. I think you are completely confused between networking and s/pdif protocols - which are so completely different... S/pdif is synchronous and TCP/IP is asynchronous for a start... Let me try it in capitals: THERE IS NO JITTER IN ASYNCHRONOUS PROTOCOLS, BECAUSE THERE IS NO CLOCK TO BE OUT OF TIME WITH. -- Phil Leigh You want to see the signal path BEFORE it gets onto a CD/vinyl...it ain't what you'd call minimal... Touch(wired/W7)+Teddy Pardo PSU - Audiolense 3.3/2.0+INGUZ DRC - MF M1 DAC - Linn 5103 - full Aktiv 5.1 system (6x LK140's, ESPEK/TRIKAN/KATAN/SEIZMIK 10.5), Pekin Tuner, Townsend Supertweeters,VdH Toslink,Kimber 8TC Speaker & Chord Signature Plus Interconnect cables Stax4070+SRM7/II phones Kitchen Boom, Outdoors: SB Radio, Harmony One remote for everything. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Phil Leigh's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=85 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=91322 _______________________________________________ audiophiles mailing list audiophiles@lists.slimdevices.com http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/audiophiles