Yoder,
Regarding the power cord, it's non-polarized, and as I mentioned in a previous post, flipping the cable over can change the presentation a bit. Also, this thing is so quiet that there is really no need for any additional RFI control, and it would seem to me that adding tape and such to chips could be bad for heat dissipation and would possibly be the kind of thing that could void the warranty.
I've heard it for myself -- a stock, fresh from the box 2010 mini sounds better than a 2009 with typical audio use tweaks. Those would include, but are not limited to: turning off spotlight, journaling, dashboard, any unnecessary interfaces (I leave ethernet on for headless operation, but turn blue tooth and wifi off), changing power management and screen saver options, etc., etc.
I'd really suggest you go have a look at the Channel D web site and see how they deal with docking to iTunes, sampling rate and bit-depth, etc. As for the audiomidi, the macs will support whatever dac is connected, so if your dac does 24/96 or even 192, the mini will work just fine with it... and PureMusic, unlike iTunes, will automatically change the sample rate to match the track being played. PureMusic also does things somewhat differently from Amarra in that PM and I tunes running together (using iTunes for database functions only) is actually a smaller footprint than I tunes running by itself. Amarra uses a ghost play mode where it plays two music streams and throws one away (the normal iTunes Quicktime stream) and the Amarra playback engine then communicates with the dac. Web site for PM is:
http://www.channld.comThere is a free, full-function demo and the software has no complex kernel lock copy protection, just a username and key.
I need to mention that I am not in any way affiliated with any of these companies, just a very satisfied customer and one who has experienced, for the first time, the long-awaited promise of digital in what can only be described as a game-changing way.
Thanks for the tip on Opera, but I'm still using my windows machines for forums and such until I get more used to VoiceOver, and Opera is not a viable solution with the screen reader on my windows machines. Sad, but the only real workable browsers are IE and FF, and they both have their issues, so depending on what I'm doing, I need them both. So far though, Safari with VoiceOver, while a very different screen reading and browsing experience, is looking very, very nice from my perspective. Not perfect, but seems to do everything that both FF and IE do with the windows screen reader, and some things that neither of them can do. At this point I have no idea how accessible Opera is with VO, but I will check it out at some point I'm sure.
Getting closer to having tunes... Another hour perhaps. At this rate I probably won't put the paramours in until tomorrow.
-- Jim