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Might make sense, DSP version uses dithering, VST version apparently not (!).....
Which probably makes sense: The more really loud sounds have played, the closer all bands have been lowered to their target levels, and hence the more they approach each other.
This sounds very convincing, for the ST DSP reproduction of highs and sibilances is very muffled.
This begs the question: does noise shaping adversely impact the open-ness (fullness) and sibilances to the extent that it's audible?
The thing is, if dithering induces audible artifacts to highs, then it's not perceptible in loud portions of the track probably because it's getting masked. However in portions where there are reverbs, sibilances followed by a brief span of silence, then the difference can be made. And it's really a staring one for you can take a blind test and tell one from the other.
Anyways I always had the notion that ST Standalone and VST sound alike and the DSP sounds different. And your explanation just strengthens that. I can continue using VST with a peace of mind then.
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So I'm assuming that you can only hear a difference at the start?
Actually I took utmost care to make sure that the levels are same prior playing the track. I shutdown the player after encoding thru VST. Re-opened it and played it thru DSP. This points to something I complained before- DSP having slower AGC gain rush. Anyways I am not conerned anymore about it. I love ST VST and serves my all transcoding purposes well.
On a side note I tried Tape Restore Live(don't worry Hans, I am not gonna begin cribbing about that). I really liked this app. Didn't know about it until one of your early posts in beta section where you implemented the hiss reduction functionality in ST. Thanks for this app.
Continuing with the previous topic, Hans I honestly feel that the website actually needs a facelift for your own good.
First things first, you must realize this is NO longer a casual hobby project you might have started with. Despite the kind of software that ST has evolved into over the years, many visitors and prospective customers would get this feeling, looking at the website, that this is just another amateur-ish app. It's excellent that you are taking your time out to write the documentation. But then 'first impression can't be made the second time'. I genuinely don't want that you lose customer base just because someone feels the site is 'shabby'.
Given there are so many free CSS templates available, which I guess your hosting http server supports, please give your site a Web 2.0 ish feel. Forum members too can contribute to this cause.