How do 2,000 hours of music look like?

Jun 7, 2007 13:51 GMT  ·  By

OK, so you've got a lot of music and sometimes it gets really hard to find what you wanted and really can't remember to whom you have given some CDs and never got them back... Or you are simply tired and way sick of loading-unloading discs from your player but still will not renounce to your musical habits. Maybe it's high time you thought about a music server.[admark=1]

The new gear from McIntosh Laboratory, the MS750 Music Server is one huge depository for all the music you could think of. It is the second server in the McIntosh line and it will offer a more than serious storage place for your musical needs.

The McIntosh MS750 sports 750GB of hard-drive space which will be able to store the content of about 2,700 CDs in full resolution in FLAC format, or 120,000 songs. Working with your music has never been easier as the MS750 will now allow you to easily and quickly hold, catalog and sort through the 2,000 hours of audio it can store.

Even more, finding and accessing your music is made by means of on-screen menus and things are clear for non-pros as well. Jukebox mode is also available for finding and appending songs to the running playlist on the fly. Connect the McIntosh to the internet and retrieve CD cover art and song titles via Gracenote.

The MS750 sports built-in CD, CD-R, CD-RW, MP3, WMA and ACC player as well as a CD-burner. It has hi-grade DACs and can work with multiple RS232 data ports. The McIntosh MS750 sports multi-language support and has also analog recording capabilities and internet radio features.

The new McIntosh MS750 Music Server is available now for $6,000.

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