
I must admit, I don't do the iTunes thing. In fact, I've yet to download a single song from any music site. If that makes me a cultural Neanderthal, then so be it. Just keep your paws off my LPs, or I'll whack you with my trusty Mastodon rib.
Kidding aside, I do have a formidable CD collection. And the problem with a large CD collection is that it is, well, large. In my case, I have to store the CDs in multiple cases: one in the living room, another in the family room, etc. Tracking down an individual CD is an exercise in frustration and luck; in fact, it actually involves exercise.
Enter the Harman Kardon DMC 1000, a
QNX-based media server that automatically copies CDs to a hard drive as the CDs are playing. Which means that, eventually, a good chunk of your CD collection ends up in a single, relatively small location. Better yet, you can listen to that collection from almost any room in your house, using the DMC's multi-zone feature. I could get used to that.
I first wrote about this device a few months ago, when it won a European Imaging and Sound Association (EISA)
Best Product award. Well, I just found out that the editors of the German magazine
HiFi Test also gave the DMC 1000 the thumbs up, voting it best
product of the year. From what I've read, the editors rarely agree on a best product of the year, so they must have been some impressed.
And get this: The DMC 1000 also received a GOOD DESIGN award from "The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design." The GOOD DESIGN award honors the "pursuit of excellence in form, function and aesthetics..." I could be wrong, but I believe this means that the GOOD Design folks think the DMC 1000 looks really cool.
Naturally, all this coolness comes at a price, so being the skinflint that I am, I haven't bought one.
Yet. :-)