spog posted:Yeah, about a decade ago, the EU imposed max volume restrictions on mp3 players. I've just assumed that the reason why I can't turn my iPhone/earbuds/AirPods up high enough to overcome aircraft engines or nearby road construction is because they've removed that regional distinction and just applied the 85dB limit everywhere.
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# ? May 18, 2018 13:46 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 10:56 |
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Empress Brosephine posted:I thought all bose products where poo poo is that not true They’re expensive but there is a reason you’ll see a ton of them in use by business travelers. I’m sure the sound quality isn’t incredible but you’re in a giant rumbling tin can listening to stereo audio from a tablet, not exactly the greatest environment or source.
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:05 |
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Data Graham posted:I've just assumed that the reason why I can't turn my iPhone/earbuds/AirPods up high enough to overcome aircraft engines or nearby road construction is because they've removed that regional distinction and just applied the 85dB limit everywhere. http://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1881130,00.html quote:In 2006 a Louisiana man filed suit against Apple, claiming that iPods are "not sufficiently adorned with adequate warnings regarding the likelihood of hearing loss." Soon after, health authorities in France demanded increased safety measures. So the company, based in Cupertino, Calif., revised its software to set the maximum volume at 100 dB (the equivalent of standing next to a pneumatic drill) for devices sold in Europe. Portnuff says certain devices sold in the U.S. can reach beyond 100 dB, however; some have recorded levels as high as 115 dB, similiar to a chainsaw or rock concert. https://www.apple.com/sound/faq.html I don't think that is the case with you: if you want to go ahead and wreck your hearing, then you can do it quote:A. On an iPod nano, iPod classic, iPod touch or iPhone, you can adjust the maximum volume by going into your Settings menu. On an iPod shuffle, adjust the volume to the desired maximum volume. Connect your iPod shuffle to iTunes and select "Limit maximum volume". Drag the slider to the desired maximum volume. The initial slider setting corresponds to the volume the iPod shuffle was set to when you selected the "Limit maximum volume" checkbox.
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:11 |
Blah. My volume limit (Settings -> Music) is already set to unrestricted / maximum.
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:22 |
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What I keep wondering is how you can set a decibel limit without knowing the electrical and acoustical specs of the headphones you use - a pair of IEMs and a pair of 600Ω over-ear phones will respond very differently to the same power delivery. Is it calibrated for the bundled earbuds? Do they do something smart with electrical measurements?
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:34 |
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Data Graham posted:Blah. My volume limit (Settings -> Music) is already set to unrestricted / maximum. OH, IN THAT CASE, MAYBE YOU COULD CONSIDER A HEADPHONE AMPLIFIER. YOU CAN GET NICE LITTLE BATTERY ONES THAT COMPLIMENT AN MP3 PLAYER OR MAKE ONE OF YOUR OWN FROM AN ALTOIDS TIN.
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:35 |
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spog posted:OH, IN THAT CASE, MAYBE YOU COULD CONSIDER A HEADPHONE AMPLIFIER. I used this when I flew before I got my noise canceling Bose. Does a good job, and has multiple outputs so you can listen/watch a movie together with whoever is seated next to you. https://www.amazon.com/Upbeat-Audio-T613-BNC-Boostaroo-Application/dp/B000EIWCFE/
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# ? May 18, 2018 14:45 |
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Supposedly, using a headphone amp with its own battery will save you a tiny bit of main-device battery life. Probably not enough to be noticeable, but you know - if you want one and need one more argument to justify it. As for which one, the small Fiios seem to review well and charge over usb. I've only used one of their larger models myself, though. (I'm happy with my E7, but I use it as a USB soundcard on a PC.) Computer viking has a new favorite as of 14:59 on May 18, 2018 |
# ? May 18, 2018 14:46 |
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Empress Brosephine posted:I thought all bose products where poo poo is that not true I bought Bose QC25s which were the main hyped poo poo before the new wireless ones came out, and I sold them after one day of use. They were comfy to wear and the noise cancellation was amazing, but they were cheap plastic poo poo, and the sound quality was absolutely horrible. I have some random $40 noise cancelling Sony earbuds I picked up at an airport years ago, and they sound tons better, but the nc is of course weaker. So for commuters and airplane travellers, go ahead with Bose QCs. If you're interested in music and good sound quality, stay far away.
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# ? May 18, 2018 15:20 |
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Humbug Scoolbus posted:I still have my MSI U100 Wind... I had the the Advent 4211, which was a re-badged u100 that PC World sold in the UK cheaper than the official wind. I bought it to replace an XPS M1310 that was stolen because I've always had a boner for subcompacts, and thought it was pretty rad that the traditionally more expensive form factor was now the budget option. Flashed the MSI BIOS instead to fix some issues (and allow overclocking! ), added the extra gig of ram and a then pretty big 500GB platter drive and used it quite happily for years. It always seemed much the same to me in speed on either Win7 or OSX as it did on XP. It was really good to have something super portable that would run windows apps that was cheap enough that it wasn't a big deal if it got lost/damaged/stolen. Take it to the beach, why not? As you say, it was a great size for an aeroplane table, and when you stuffed a 9 * CR18650 pack in it would get decent runtime, though the battery pack was heavier than the unit and pitched the keyboard higher than a desktop board. Mine got it's last run in public when I used it a couple of years ago to play the music for a friends walk down the aisle through the PA, and later their first dance. Good boy, Advent 4211, enjoy life at the farm.
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# ? May 18, 2018 16:36 |
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I replaced my EeePC with a Chromebook, and when I had enough of the gradual reduction in performance from ChromeOS becoming more and more x86-focused, I replaced it with a Thinkpad T420. Then I figured that was too big and heavy, so I got a T440, which turned out to have battery issues (removing the battery to make it boot again is a pain in the rear end when you've got the internal battery installed). So I replaced that with an X220i, fully decked out with 8GB RAM, SSD, 5GHz wifi and the big 9-cell battery, so I'm back to the subnotebook form factor, but with infinitely better keyboard and build quality. I will never buy another laptop with a screen bigger than 13". KozmoNaut has a new favorite as of 11:52 on May 22, 2018 |
# ? May 22, 2018 11:46 |
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My trusty Lenovo X230 with 12 gigs of ram and an SSD is still serving me as my daily work machine just fine. The thing is built like a loving tank and I actually love the aesthetic, everything Lenovo has put out after it just doesn't do it for me. (Also X230 is still driven by an i5 Intel so it often outperforms more power conscious models today.) Best of all worlds really, unless you hate chiclet keyboards.
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# ? May 22, 2018 15:25 |
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The X260 I got for work runs something like 20 hours on a charge. If I'm going somewhere for the day (another office, coffee shop, in-town conference, whatever) I don't even both taking the charger any more, I know I can get a full day of actual work out of the battery. I love it. My perfect laptop would still be a X60 body with a modern processor/RAM and a high-resolution 4:3 screen, but I might as well ask for a magical genius unicorn to do math for me.
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# ? May 22, 2018 15:41 |
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KozmoNaut posted:I replaced my EeePC with a Chromebook, and when I had enough of the gradual reduction in performance from ChromeOS becoming more and more x86-focused, I replaced it with a Thinkpad T420. Then I figured that was too big and heavy, so I got a T440, which turned out to have battery issues (removing the battery to make it boot again is a pain in the rear end when you've got the internal battery installed). So I replaced that with an X220i, fully decked out with 8GB RAM, SSD, 5GHz wifi and the big 9-cell battery, so I'm back to the subnotebook form factor, but with infinitely better keyboard and build quality. My ThinkPad T540p has been doing pretty good even though it's four years old (apart from the screen dying but I wanted a new display for it anyway), but it's not the most portable computer in the world. I'm hoping we'll be able to get a Windows desktop built before it dies because when it does I'm probably going the Chromebook direction too. Mak0rz has a new favorite as of 15:57 on May 22, 2018 |
# ? May 22, 2018 15:49 |
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KozmoNaut posted:I will never buy another laptop with a screen bigger than 13".
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:14 |
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FilthyImp posted:Sub-15 is a pain to work with if you're video editing or doing photoshop stuff tho. If I were to do that, I would plug in a bigass monitor anyway.
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# ? May 23, 2018 06:42 |
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# ? Jun 1, 2018 21:26 |
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Watching a few older Techmoan vids and it always amuses me that he is such a huge nerd then bam shows off his gangster rap tapes and records. For example but just a random one I'm watching https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7mYoi3uJEi0
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 04:56 |
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Humphreys posted:Watching a few older Techmoan vids and it always amuses me that he is such a huge nerd then bam shows off his gangster rap tapes and records. I'm also a huge nerd but not in a cool way with lots of followers like that guy. I got into gangster rap because when you just killed a man and hijacked a car to get away and the police are chasing you, you don't have time to mess around with the radio so you end up listening to whatever the last owner of the car was listening to, so after playing Grand Theft Auto San Andreas for a while, I started to like a bunch of different types of music. That's my story of how you can get into non-nerdy music in a nerdy way, thanks for listening. I didn't watch much of that video, but I got the impression that tapes are being made again. Why? Is the sound warm? Is it the experience of putting the tape into the player? It's definitely nothing to do with the album art right?
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 07:40 |
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Buttcoin purse posted:I didn't watch much of that video, but I got the impression that tapes are being made again. Why? Is the sound warm? Is it the experience of putting the tape into the player? It's definitely nothing to do with the album art right? People whose formative years were during the cassette tape era are now old and rich enough to buy over-priced nostalgia poo poo. They are not really being made again, just the lowest quality ones for novelty reasons (think Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack and 8 bit music kind of stuff). Of course, techmoan has a long video just about tapes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVoSQP2yUYA
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 08:04 |
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Unlike vinyl, I'm not getting the impression that people are claiming some ethereal golden-eared warmth, though. It looks like nostalgia, kitsch appeal, whatever. I've seen stuff that was probably produced for 192 kbps MP3 get pressed onto limited-edition vinyl and sometimes cassette on bandcamp and I guess it sells. I'm guilty of such a behavior, but I wasn't interested in the sound quality as much as the kitsch. I once bought a limited edition transcoded-to-warm-24-kbps album on a hand-labeled CD-R because I had gotten a good amount of enjoyment out of the free version. I partly wanted to support the artist, but I thought it was a cozy little idea and it tickled me.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 08:51 |
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Last year I bought a vaporwave album that comes on two 3.5" floppies. I don't give a poo poo about 24kbps music but more the hours of lo-fi hip hop the artist also produced that I've enjoyed, so throwing them $9 was a no-brainer when they finally had a physical release of some kind.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 08:55 |
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I'd imagine a good portion of whatever tape production there still is goes to religious groups, just due to the simplicity of it for putting sermons or whatever onto tape.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 08:58 |
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Yeah old people hold on to media way past it’s prime. I remember my grandma having and using and 8-track in her car in the late 90’s
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 14:26 |
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Vinyl's appeal is in the experience, anyone who tells you otherwise just doesn't realize it yet
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 14:41 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMTpvr9HXeI Rolling Stone article about the National Audio Company from 2016 It sounds like they're still going reasonably strong, in that according to a local news article from January they're starting to manufacture their own cassette tape instead of buying rapidly diminishing old stock from the 80s. This article also points out that outside of music, the tape duplicator also has long-term customers in the form of "the federal government, state-owned libraries for blind and visually impaired folks, religious institutions and customers seeking to restore taped materials from the 1960s and 1970s."
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 14:50 |
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Iron Crowned posted:Vinyl's appeal is in the experience, anyone who tells you otherwise just doesn't realize it yet I like it because I enjoy getting the records out and putting them on. Plus it forces me to sit there and listen to the whole album. It's a fun experience. When albums came out on vinyl or tape, you had to make every song on there decent. Not like CDs where you could throw on a dumb song because people could just skip past it. They can make vinyl be as high quality as it ever had been. Tapes will never be high quality ever again because no one makes the high quality tapes, and no one licenses the technology that made them not suck. Every once in a while I think about how it would be neat to have a walkman and some tapes or something. Then I remember it wasn't really all that great in the first place.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 15:02 |
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Speaking of retro music stuff: I know this thread has gone over the early 90's demo scene already, probably multiple times, but I recently discovered and bought Purple Motion's "Musicdisk" album. https://www.amazon.com/Musicdisk-Purple-Motion/dp/B077S3TCS5 The new versions of Starshine and 2nd Reality are really cool, and there's a really great version of Satellite One that is just a high-quality render of the original. The other music on there isn't usually my brand of music, but something about it triggers the nostalgia feels in a big way. The opening track In Certain Frequency is impossibly catchy. Best 6 bux I've spent in a long time. I highly recommend it to anyone who loved the old demo scene.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 16:48 |
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doctorfrog posted:Unlike vinyl, I'm not getting the impression that people are claiming some ethereal golden-eared warmth, though. It looks like nostalgia, kitsch appeal, whatever. I've seen stuff that was probably produced for 192 kbps MP3 get pressed onto limited-edition vinyl and sometimes cassette on bandcamp and I guess it sells. If there is anything vinyl has over other formats for sound is if you have an album made before the noise war and prefer the original mix over whatever remasters came after. The appeal for cassette tapes really is for the eccentricities of the format like the hiss from an old tape. Contemporary artists that release anything on tape do it for that kind of sound that you can't reproduce in a studio.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 17:45 |
It’s like how tractor-feed carbon paper will never go away as long as there is a need to sign three things at the same time, like at a car dealership.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 18:11 |
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Tapes are fun in a car because they're easy to deal with onehanded, more durable than CDs, and the poorer sound quality is less noticeable on the road. I've got a tape deck in my pickup, half a dozen cassettes and a cassette adapter to plug in my phone, it's pretty decent.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 18:12 |
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Star Man posted:If there is anything vinyl has over other formats for sound is if you have an album made before the noise war and prefer the original mix over whatever remasters came after.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 18:43 |
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Who didn't make dumb radio shows as a child?
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 18:45 |
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I used an Atari 2600 for sound effects and pretended I was a kid lost in space. Then I'd interview my dinosaurs. Sometimes being a kid is just really great.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 18:50 |
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I had a tape deck in my car until last year when I replaced it with an Android Auto stereo head. The tape deck portion had actually stopped working a year or more before that so no more tape adapter. I replaced that with a Bluetooth FM transmitter but that poo poo was finnicky as hell.
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# ? Jun 3, 2018 19:03 |
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If the typical patent lifetime is 25 years, anyone should be legally able to produce cassette tape to rival the state of the art in early 1993 by now. Actually doing so is probably a bit of an art form, though.
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# ? Jun 4, 2018 01:27 |
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Computer viking posted:If the typical patent lifetime is 25 years, anyone should be legally able to produce cassette tape to rival the state of the art in early 1993 by now. Actually doing so is probably a bit of an art form, though. I think it's that a lot of tooling/techniques...etc was destoryed or trashed, there's nothing to stop you from doing it except for building a whole new line to...well, make cassette tapes.
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# ? Jun 4, 2018 01:29 |
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Computer viking posted:If the typical patent lifetime is 25 years, anyone should be legally able to produce cassette tape to rival the state of the art in early 1993 by now. Actually doing so is probably a bit of an art form, though. I actually did some reading into that stuff a while ago and the general consensus seemed to be there's not a big enough market for companies to care and even though the patents have expired, the intellectual property and trademarks of Dolby B/C/S/NR/etc are still around and lawyers will jump at your throat if you try to use them. So while you could throw every Dolby trick in the book at a player, you'd be basically unable to actually say that you did and communicate to consumers "yes this is Dolby NR it's the exact same technology we just can't call it Dolby NR but please if you have a tape with Dolby NR flick this switch on that isn't labeled anything related to Dolby NR to get Dolby NR". Also currently existing stocks of chips all have the Dolby branding on them so they're unusable since Dolby won't license out Dolby NR anymore.
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# ? Jun 4, 2018 02:51 |
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I have a lot of nostalgia for cassette tapes. We were pretty poor, so I used to record songs off the radio I liked until I had the tape full then go dig up another blank tape.
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# ? Jun 4, 2018 08:19 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 10:56 |
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ishikabibble posted:you'd be basically unable to actually say that you did and communicate to consumers "yes this is Dolby NR it's the exact same technology we just can't call it Dolby NR but please if you have a tape with Dolby NR flick this switch on that isn't labeled anything related to Dolby NR to get Dolby NR". I believe that falls under nominative use and you actually could say that.
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# ? Jun 4, 2018 09:27 |