![]() ![]() Debate about the merits of MQA belong elsewhere. NB: Nothing in this post should be construed as an endorsement - nor a derision - of MQA. Please refer to the recent (much reviled) MQA discussion in this thread for more details on this. UAPP's MQA decoder will upsample such tracks to 2X in those cases. ![]() They should play as 44.1KHz (most of them) or 48KHz on the DAC. You will find a ton of Master tracks on Tidal (millions to be more specific) that contain no additional samples, so nothing to unfold. But anything above 2X probably doesn't matter anyway. While these are pretty great recordings (some of them even phenomenal) I am skeptical that there is much 352.8KHz content in there. Kodi has implemented their own drivers just as UAPP has. No Qobuz app and I can't get UAPP installed on it for the life of me. Tidal, and everything else gets down sampled. Try playing the following albums, which will unfold to 352.8KHz (8x 44.1KHz):ĢL / Mozart Violin Concertos, Trondheimsolistene: I have a nvidia shield also and the only thing that outputs bitperfect audio is Kodi. But the base sample rate of the file/track will always be 44.1KHz or 48KHz. In the case of Master tracks, SOME of them contain higher samples folded as MQA origami, which will be unfolded either by UAPP's MQA decoder (to 2X the base sample rate) or by an MQA DAC (to 2X or 4X the base sample rate, or even higher). Not pushing for podcasts like Spotify is doing. Not a ton of popups or useless notifications. In the case of non-Master tracks, that's just their sample rate, period. IMO the Tidal app is way better than the Spotify one, for these reasons: Properly notified when new releases. All files/tracks from Tidal are either 44.1KHz or 48KHz. ![]()
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