Feanor
08-19-2015, 06:28 AM
I've sprung $50 for an AudioQuest Jitterbug: see ...
JitterBug (http://www.audioquest.com/jitterbug/jitterbug)
http://www.audioquest.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/JitterBug_300x300_main3.jpg http://www.audioquest.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/JitterBug_300x140_callout.jpg
This had a very positive review in the September '15 Stereophile. The reviewer was John Atkinson, chief editor and measurement guy; Atkinson said he heard a significant improvement with the Jitterbug between his Mac computer and DACs he tried -- this despite that he couldn't measure any significant difference using his standard measuring devices.
The AudioQuest Jitterbug apparently differs from the Uptone Audio REGEN and also the Schiit Audio WYRD in that it doesn't function as a USB hub. Most or all USB hubs "regenerate" the USB packets before passing them to/from the downstream device. OTOH the Jitterbug seems, from what I gather, to merely filter the power and signal feeds from the computer, removing noise generated by the latter.
I'm a cheapskate and also a skeptic about sonic improvements but I figured for $50 I'd it a try. I will update with my impressions.
JitterBug (http://www.audioquest.com/jitterbug/jitterbug)
http://www.audioquest.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/JitterBug_300x300_main3.jpg http://www.audioquest.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/JitterBug_300x140_callout.jpg
This had a very positive review in the September '15 Stereophile. The reviewer was John Atkinson, chief editor and measurement guy; Atkinson said he heard a significant improvement with the Jitterbug between his Mac computer and DACs he tried -- this despite that he couldn't measure any significant difference using his standard measuring devices.
The AudioQuest Jitterbug apparently differs from the Uptone Audio REGEN and also the Schiit Audio WYRD in that it doesn't function as a USB hub. Most or all USB hubs "regenerate" the USB packets before passing them to/from the downstream device. OTOH the Jitterbug seems, from what I gather, to merely filter the power and signal feeds from the computer, removing noise generated by the latter.
I'm a cheapskate and also a skeptic about sonic improvements but I figured for $50 I'd it a try. I will update with my impressions.