It's also of clearly compact footprint to not tax the host's computational resources. In use it's fundamentally no different from iTunes to follow the same general conventions. With iTunes dead, Origin now runs its own GUI, indexing and signal routing. As someone who came to PCfi with an iMac and PureMusic working behind iTunes, my subsequent Audirvana install all the way to the last 3.2xxx legacy version also used iTunes as the GUI skin to work its sound optimizing magic behind it. With plenty of small icons embedded in Origin's upper task bar, lower status bar and left menu, a mouse hover brings up short explanatory text as to what pressing any icon does. Being offline beyond the untiring eye in the sky is one of the privileges of playing back music we've actually bought. Unlike Audirvana Studio, it only serves/streams local files. Certain few obscure features excepted, Origin needs no live Internet connection. It's easy to manually split a screen and share it with my Qobuz Sublime subscription should the mood strike. Obviously the main Origin window can be sized as we wish to float anywhere on our desktop.
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A LHY Audio network switch on the RJ45 input preconditions incoming cloud files while a Singxer SU-6 USB bridge on super-cap power follows the USB output as all outgoing signal's post-conditioner and precision reclocker before it ever sees the DAC. įinally the new iMac with Audirvana Origin in situ next to my listening chair. … and here the large cover view launched by clicking on the small album thumb nail in the lower left corner.
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Here is an album during play in light mode…