I wasn't assuming anything. I was just wondering. I guess it comes down to convenience. I got rid of all my CDs about 10 years ago. They are all ripped to ALAC in iTunes. I have an iPod I keep in the car, essentially permanently connected to my car. I bring it in to sync every month or two to add new music. I use Airplay to my Yamaha receiver to listen, but I also have a media streamer running XBMC connected if I want "bit perfect" higher rez stuff, which I rarely do. It's clear I'm not a high end audiophile
That said, at RMAF I say a number of media streamers and servers. The sales pitches to me were very simplistic; like explaining how using a car could get you to the store faster then a horse drawn carriage. I guess I was an early adopter and I didn't know it.
As for "WHY do people feel the need to rip their CDs and listen digitally", well listening to a CD directly IS listening digitally. There is no difference if the file is read from the CD player or is read from a hard drive; same bits. The DAC is what converts it from Digital to Analog. The DAC is where it's at!
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The convenience of never having to change CDs, never having to clean them, never having to worry about scratching them, never having to worry about them get lost, stolen, warped, or even of having to hear my wife complain how about how much space they take up, was anough for me to rip them. Ripping is actually pretty easy. I simple took a stack of CDs and put them next to my computer. Ripping software like XLD or iTunes can ripping automatically when a CD is inserted, then spit it our when done. I just did it in the background until all the stacks were done. A couple of weeks of work and then done.
But mostly I just don't understand the need for really really high end CD players. If one has that much money, it seems ripping and serving them up would be much better way to spend the money.