Nothing fancy at all, and in fact most audiophiles would probably consider this rather poor as an audio source with no optimization in place nor consideration for stuff like noise or jitter. In this context with an aged slow machine, I wondered how would the measurements of the Light Harmonic Geek Out V2 perform (see my previous review of the DAC using Windows 10)? I loaded up all the test tracks on the 16GB SanDisk Ultra USB stick plugged in to the left of the machine running at USB2 speed. Linux runs fine on the machine but it's obviously not fast, but works for light web surfing, E-mail, word processing. Whole OS loaded up on the tiny storage, no problem. It's one of the early Intel Atom N270 CPU's (32-bit, single-core hyperthreading, 1.6GHz), 2GB DDR2 RAM. ![]() ![]() ![]() As you see, I've got Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (updates current as of Sept 2015) loaded up on the old machine which has been sitting around unused for a few years.
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