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radioactive28

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Posts posted by radioactive28


  1. Thanks for the info. For me, attending concerts were a good lesson in what live music should sound like. I got much less critical of sound staging after a few concerts.

     

    Realised where you sit will influence what you hear and that there is no such thing as the right sound.

     

    Just enjoy the music. :)

     

    Totally agree on the sitting. I've been to Singapore Conference Hall a few times, for various performances, and realised that some positions gave quite a weird stereo effect, completely out of whack with what my eyes were seeing.

     

    Got me wondering about how acoustic design worked and what they were even trying to achieve.


  2. My H340 needed to change the battery. I also had a hard time deciding on the Iaudio 7 & D2. At last, I ordered a 16GB I7 due to I don't need video. Still waiting for it's arrival.

     

    Now, I am searching for IEM ( ACS T1 or UE 11 Pro ). That's will stop me from upgrading.

     

    :call:

     

    Worcell.com sells the 2200mAh battery for the H3xx, and it's based locally. It's a slightly tight fit, but it fits.


  3. Gah, bumping my own thread, but heck.

     

    One year on, I haven't gotten SSDs for my H320, and HDD players seemed to have been all phased out.

    Did get the next best thing though - a CF-to-1.8"-IDE adaptor that's supposed to work for players (1st/2nd-gen iPod, H1xx, H3xx, certain iAudio models?) using the Toshiba 1.8" HDD.

     

    A downside though - I've either gotten a faulty adaptor, or it's just not working for my player.

    If anyone would like to have a try, or give your player a new lease of life, just let me know =)

    (Plus, I'd really like to see this mod work.)

     

    By the way, if the adaptor does work, a 32Gb CF card costs about, what, 300 bucks max?


  4. wifi without a web browser? this was creative's chance to answer the itouch but alas it's not be.

     

    Bro, have you ever tried surfing the web on your mobile phone, PSP or a PDA?

    Small screen + lack of qwerty keyboard + no intuitive means of navigation = absolute pain

     

    It's far from challenging the iPod touch, but if they can do good wireless PC-to-player transfer, I think it should already be a winner in its own right.


  5. Congrats on the UE10Pros :D

     

    First time I've heard of such a service though.

    Is there anything special about the industrial CD ripper as compared to your average CD drive? Batch processing for all the discs?

     

    Anyway, from my POV, I would stick to the 320kbps and do a slow transition over to lossless (encoding to FLAC seems to be pretty fast for your modern C2D processor), just to see if there is any difference in quality.

     


  6. Oh, okay, I see what you're trying to do.

     

    Many programmes will internally decode the MP3 file before re-encoding it to whatever new format you want.

     

    Pardon me if you already know this, or if I assumed wrongly, but there's a catch.

    For example, if you've got an MP3 file @ 192kbps, there's no point re-encoding it to a higher bitrate or quality (e.g., 320kbps AAC) because there won't be any real increase in quality.


  7. Not too sure what you're asking...

    How about you tell us exactly what you want to do? For example, converting MP3 to WMA, or CD to MP3 et cetera.

     

     

    In terms of data processing,

    If you're encoding directly from an audio CD, it's raw data (i.e., not encoded).

    If you're converting from MP3, AAC, WMA etc, they're already encoded, and will most likely be decoded before being re-encoded again.

     

    If you're asking about the actual process, most programmes should be able to directly encode what you have (source) to what you want (destination), without creating a 3rd temporary file.


  8. I don't know if MP3BookHelper works under Vista, but it can do Unicode and FreeDB.

    EAC can't seem to handle Unicode, which is the source of your problems.

     

    You can also try changing Vista's default language handling to Japanese or Chinese. It's not just changing your display to show Japanese or Chinese though. (This is less useful though, since you have to change to JP for JP, and change again for CH.)

    Maybe you could check Google for help on this. Or I'll make another post later, when I log into Vista and can detail the exact steps.


  9. haha tahnks all for the reply. guess shouldnt take the risk...

     

    but is bose really taht bad. tot there must surely be a reason y the headphones are priced so ex. :wacko:

     

    Yep, the reason is called branding, product positioning.

     

    The sound quality of the QC3 is actually decent enough, if you disregard the price.


  10. EDIT: (didn't read properly)

     

    It's possibly just your player, since the UM2 is supposed to be slightly more sensitive.

    Try adding some impedance between your player and the 'phones.

     

    The part about more hiss with EQ, it might be that the EQ implementation on your player is bad.

    The iPods were like this.


  11. Oh man I never expected this. So far I had bought 2 Creative MP3 players and they ripped me to some extent :(. I remember checking the space and thought it to be occupied by the OS.

    When you do get the Cowon D2 16Gb, check its capacity.

    Don't be too surprised to find only 15,259Mb, or 14.9Gb.

     

     

    http://forums.highdefdigest.com/showthread.php?p=381932

     

    Here's a lesson in how storage formats report their data. Storage formats--ALL OF THEM--HDDs, DVDs, HD-DVDs, BDs, flash drives, etc. use the SI definiton of KB, MB, GB. That is, 1 KB = 1000 bytes, 1 MB = 1000 KB, 1 GB = 1000 MB. Thus, when an HDD reports that it has 80 GB, they mean it has 80,000,000,000 bytes available on it. Computer OSes don't use that. They use the binary definition for KB et al. 1 KB = 1024 bytes, 1 MB = 1024 KB, 1 GB = 1024 KB. TO prevent this confusion, these are sometimes written as KiB, MiB, etc. ("binary kilobyte"). So, let's do the math

     

    For DVD,

    4.7 GB ==> 4.337 GiB

    8.5 GB ==> 7.91 GiB

     

    For Blu-ray,

    50 GB = 50,000,000,000 bytes. To convert that into the GiB that the computer sees, we divide by 1024^3, and get...46.56 GiB.

     

    For HDDs,

    80 GB ==> 74.5 GiB

    120 GB ==> 111.75 GiB

     

    For HD-DVD,

    30 GB ==> 27.93 GiB

    51 GB ==> 47.49 GiB


  12. I don't exactly abuse my e4c, but don't really take care of it either.

    The cable sleeve is hardening and cracking from sweat, but the sound is still sweet.

     

    Oh, mine is 1 year 4 months old, been using it on my daily commutes (about 2 to 3 hours daily, sometimes more) since I bought it.


  13. tats what happens when they do study CS, so that they can slim shady most consumers. it's called gigabyte shaving. 5% is like 2GB shaved for their Zen 32GB. what a hoodwink!

     

    The flash chips used are pretty standard within the industry, but you don't see other companies getting sued.

    Just check out your own USB flash drives. Both my 1Gb Sandisks have about 960Mb, not 1000Mb.

     

    If anything, their fault is not skimping on the gigabyte.

    It's not including the standard disclaimer that "1Gb = 1,000,000,000 bytes".

    No matter how fine the print, it is a legal shield.

     

    Not that I'm trying to defend Creative. I think they suck at doing business.

    It's damn irritating though, to keep seeing frivolous class action suits that were possibly initiated by people who knew what they were doing when they set out on the hunting trip.

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