Good to hear it's working! If you have a session in Pro Tools at 44.1 and you try to import a file at 48, 88.2, or 96 it will in fact import it, but it detects the different sample rate and converts it. Pro Tools doesn't like the 32 bit part though, it's only 16 and 24 bit. That won't change until they upgrade the big-boy hardware (192, 96..etc)
Most of all the major sessions in the Nashville studios (Sony, Ocean Way, Warner Brothers, Blackbird..so on and so forth) are more often than not done at 48 and 96 these days. I've heard a billion reasons why, including: man it just sounds better, reverb tails get preserved more, the higher frequencies you can't hear alter the ones you can hear (often serves as an argument as to why the 44.1/nyquist theorem isn't enough)...so on and so forth. If it's going to a legit mastering facility then recording at these higher sample rates is fine and sounds great. Keep your quality as high as possible and let the mastering guy with the killer gear down convert it. Unless you have that luxury, then working from tracking to mixing at the same sample rate as your destination makes sense...start and finish at 44.1. I am a huge fan of keeping the bit depth higher than 16 though... You're always going to hear a bigger difference between 24 and 16 bit than 48 and 44.1 anyday...even if you're going to wind up at 16 bit in the end anyway...or in many cases, A FREAKING IPOD!
On that same note, I read an article recently at work that addressed the common complaint of why we haven't upgraded from the CD yet. There's been all these formats, DVD-A, SACD.... but none of these have caught on. The conclusion of the test they did is that people (engineers and average listeners) can't hear the difference. I'll have to see if I can find a link to the article online.
Cheers to the GeekTalk idea, I'm all about that.
Marc