Two things really bothered me with this review:
1. Nowhere in his video or text review did he mention Oppo did away with the esata connection on the back. I have an esata external drive that I use ALL THE TIME with my Oppo, it's got tons of content on it and I'd hate to spend money on an Oppo that has LESS of what I'd actually use than the BDP-93 I have now. Put it back on, Oppo.
2. And this statement was completely incorrect:
I'm a recording engineer, I've spent countless hours in the studio recording bands. ALL RECORDINGS ARE COMPRESSED. A compressor in the studio reduces the dynamic range of a particular track so it sits well in the mix. It's good engineering practice to do so, otherwise you'll get certain notes or phrases in the music popping way out of where they're supposed to sit in the mix. A lot of times compressors add a nice sonic touch to the track as well: the 1176 is considered a classic compressor, and the Beatles recordings often had a Fairchild compressor patched into the signal chain.
It's one thing to talk about
data compression in the context of home theater (like mp3s have lossy
data compression) but if you're going to talk about recordings and the recording process, you, Andrew, need to understand that the term "compression" has a completely different context to recording engineers, as in
signal compression. And if you don't specify which one you're talking about, a recording engineer's going to assume you mean signal, or dynamic range compression. I love compressors and what they contribute to the sonic character of a recording.
Dynamic range compression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia