In our recent Optical Storage coverage from Computex Taipei, we were very excited to hear about BluRay set top devices sampling in late 2005. BluRay and HD-DVD have some time before they start battling it out as the next accepted DVD Video (DVD-V) successor, but in the meantime, high fidelity audio format wars already began several years ago. As of now, the two strongest formats are DVD Audio (DVD-A) and Super Audio CD (SACD).



Above, you can see how various existing audio formats compare in terms of bandwidth.

While little known outside enthusiast high fidelity circles, SACD and DVD-A media are already shipping. As you may have guessed, DVD-A is simply higher fidelity audio written to DVD media instead of CD. However, DVD-A has a data rate of almost seven times that of an audio CD. This allows us to encode/playback more channels at higher frequencies and bitrates. DVD-A supports five-channel audio while CD uses only two.

CD AC97 DVD-V DVD-A SACD Azalia
Sampling Frequency
Stereo 44.1kHz 96kHz 96kHz 192kHz 2822.4K 192kHz
Multi Channels - - 48kHz 96kHz 2822.4K 192kHz
Quantization Bits 16 bits 20 bits 16/20/24 bits 16/20/24 bits 1 bit 32 bits
Still Picture Recording No - Yes Yes No -
Media Player
CD Yes - - - Yes -
DVD-V Yes - Yes - - -
DVD-A Yes - Yes Yes - -
SACD (Hybrid) Yes - - - Yes -
Encoding Methods PCM - PCM, DD PPCM/LPCM DSD -
Max. Data Rate 1.41Mbps 12Mbps 6.144Mbps 9.6Mbps 16.8Mbps 48Mbps
DSD - Direct Stream Digital
PCM - Pulse Code Modulation
PPCM - Packed PCM (Lossless)
LPCM - Liner PCM (Scalable)

Azalia, Intel's 8-channel digital audio codec, raises the bar significantly over the aging AC'97 codec. Although Azalia (and other derivative codecs) apply more channels and higher stereo frequency, the most conspicuous feature is a data rate four times that of AC'97. Similar 8-channel audio solutions from VIA will also utilize similar bandwidth and bitrate specifications.

With the newer 8-channel audio codecs, we will be able to listen to multiple DVDs with 5.1 channel audio while operating VOIP/telephony/modem devices on the same digital signal processor (DSP), completely unhindered. Using AC'97 based solutions (including the nForce2 Soundstorm MCP), playing two DVD's with stereo audio is not possible.

Although the newest Intel Alderwood and Grantsdale chipsets have multiple downfalls, audio processing is not one of them. On paper, Azalia audio puts AC'97 to shame and gives VIA's Envy processor a good run for the money. Although many of us will defend our M-Audio cards to the death, perhaps new, integrated hi-fi codecs will raise the bar of the enthusiast market even closer to professional grade audio.

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  • jliechty - Saturday, June 12, 2004 - link

    Of course, DVD-A (and maybe others) has content "protection" so you can forget ripping the music you paid for to your own hard disk for your own personal listening pleasure that is within your fair use rights which the RIAA says you don't really have. If it weren't for that BS, I'd be more excited about the new high bandwidth audio formats.
  • artifex - Friday, June 11, 2004 - link

    for the sake of completeness, doesn't CD+G allow for still pictures?
  • Apologiliac - Friday, June 11, 2004 - link

    I think this will be very exciting when we see regular music cd's of today shipping in DVD-a format

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