I think that a calculation of 32-Bit float to 32-bit integer would
make more sense.  Why go to 48-bit when a power of 2 puts you to
64-bit.

Rick

Friday, May 25, 2001, you wrote:

JS> There is interesting papers at
JS>   http://www.sonic.com/sshd_otherinfo.html

JS> Including
JS>    48-Bit Integer Processing Beats 32-Bit Floating-Point for Professional
JS>    Audio Applications

JS> The master brain behind the Sonic is James A. Moorer who developed
JS> digital audio workstations at Lucasfilm, 1980 or such.

JS> Regards,

JS> Juhana


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