Goran, I agree, everyone says the same thing. To my knowledge, however, I'm the first one to provide downloadable MPX to allow instant accurate comparison. This is a *huge* deal -- when searching for quality, it's quite different to compare a processor on the air to every other overprocessed, distorted station in a market, and comparing to playing high quality music on a computer the way one usually does. When listening / living with a processor for a while, one may start to get used to the distortion.. When going from a clean non-FM source directly to processed FM though, the distortion can be overwhelming. To me, this is one of the reasons why being able to play MPX on the computer is so important -- it changes the frame of reference, away from the current distorted landscape of radio, towards clean audio.
Indeed, price isn't important for real radio stations. In fact, I'm counting on this -- I couldn't make a living selling processors for $199, the volumes are simply too small. The challenge for me now is adding enough functionality in the advanced versions to make it worthwhile for those who can afford it. I've got more than a few aces up my sleeve -- I'm not worried

. BBP is just the beginning.
Bob, it looks like I'm as much a victim of the gigahertz race as Intel themselves!
The description says 3.4 GHz P4 or faster.
A celeron E1200 (dual core 1.6 GHz) is $49 today, and it's easily twice as fast as a 3.4 GHz P4, because it's much more efficient per megahertz.
Intel's marketing used to focus on GHz. Higher number = better, right?
They were initially planning to ramp the Pentium 4 clock speed up to several gigahertz, but they simply weren't able to take it beyond 3.4 reliably. They were essentially forced to start over from scratch (with the Intel Core architecture) and focused on doing more work per mhz, instead of simply increasing the number of mhz. Unfortunately, the "more ghz is better" is deeply ingrained in all of us, and there's no way everyone could be expected to keep the performance of all these different cpu architectures in their heads

.
In short, I can see now why my description is confusing -- thank you for bringing it to my attention. I will reword the hardware requirements, and make it more understandable -- with a few examples of CPUs and relative cpu usage.
Start Breakaway when Windows loads = Excellent idea! I will add this feature before 1.0.
I would not recommend having Auto-Update on in a closed, dedicated system. In fact, having Auto-Update negates the system being closed at all!
Bob, I do sleep -- probably when you're awake

. I'm in Thailand, so I'm exactly 12 hours ahead of eastern american time.
Rob, excellent tip regarding "control userpasswords2"! Autologon is essential for setting up a dedicated audio-processing machine.
Speakerman, I looked up this CPU -- it was the lowest-end AMD when it was introduced in 2004. It's not in the ball park for running BBP, but the current generation lowest-end Intel CPU (Intel Celeron 420, 1.6 GHz single core) is! It runs BBP is cpu-optimized mode with approximately 70% cpu load. I wouldn't recommend cutting it this close when a dual-core CPU is only $10 more ($39 versus $49), but it does run. If you're interested, you could probably upgrade that token white box PC for about $100, including cpu, mainboard and memory.
Best regards,
///Leif