I've been interested in this technology since I heard about it a few years ago. Currently the highest rate they provide is 5.6448MHz @ 1-bit which corresponds to a sample every ~177 nanoseconds. This creates a raw file size of 42.34 MB (mono) or 84.68 MB (stereo) which is a bit larger than a .WAV but not absurdly so. The Korg MR1000 has a street price of about $1,100USD.goldenanalog wrote:Ever played with a KORG mr1000? If I understand the technology correctly, it uses one bit to measure the signal differential between 2 points at a rate of 200 nanoseconds per measurement-it doesn't need antialiasing or brick wall, etc. because the sampling rate is so high.
Unfortunately it doesn't really help if you do everything in-the-box. DAWs and plugins all think and work in the traditional xx-bit/yy-sample method. Until CPU power allows devs to work with 1-bit at 5.6MHz rates I think a device like that is best suited for recording analog instruments and vocals.
Still, incredibly interesting. The technical paper on 1-bit recording was an eye-opener for me:
http://www.sonicstudio.com/pdf/papers/1bitOverview.pdf (PDF)
