Sources across the net believe that the spike of guests who are visiting I^2 are separate programs that operate under an Artificial Intelligence that identifies itself as "DAVE".Apparently, the prophets of Dave are flooding the threads -___-
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My tape recorder that I have recently bought has six 1/4" ports for headphones on the left side, which is far too big for most headphones and speakers to plug into, which have 1/8" jacks. So I have ordered an 1/4" to 1/8" male to female adapter, which was 99 cents on eBay. Strangely enough, the front microphone and aux in ports are 1/8". The tape recorder does have a good speaker built in, but I'd rather plug in my computer speakers which are 2.1 and has a 1/8" jack.Here is a picture of my Eiki tape recorder, which was almost 40 dollars in total! Half of that was shipping!
Quote from: Mudkipz on September 25, 2010, 11:19:22 AMMy tape recorder that I have recently bought has six 1/4" ports for headphones on the left side, which is far too big for most headphones and speakers to plug into, which have 1/8" jacks. So I have ordered an 1/4" to 1/8" male to female adapter, which was 99 cents on eBay. Strangely enough, the front microphone and aux in ports are 1/8". The tape recorder does have a good speaker built in, but I'd rather plug in my computer speakers which are 2.1 and has a 1/8" jack.Here is a picture of my Eiki tape recorder, which was almost 40 dollars in total! Half of that was shipping! What ever. At this point, I pretty much think of you as a useless fake of a cunt, no matter what old shit you post about.
Quote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 12:40:04 PMQuote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 11:36:01 AMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:45:07 AMWhy not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?Not all MP3 players will support Ogg Vorbis.iRiver brand MP3 players do. But good point, because my SanDisk Sansa does not support OGG files as well. But I dislike the side effects of MP3 compression on sound, especially when it's 128 kbps or less. Sounds like a typical YouTube video.Any format will sound bad at 128 or less. Both of my iAudio (Cowon) players, as well as my phone, support Ogg, btw. I like the format but I prefer FLAC.
Quote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 11:36:01 AMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:45:07 AMWhy not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?Not all MP3 players will support Ogg Vorbis.iRiver brand MP3 players do. But good point, because my SanDisk Sansa does not support OGG files as well. But I dislike the side effects of MP3 compression on sound, especially when it's 128 kbps or less. Sounds like a typical YouTube video.
Quote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:45:07 AMWhy not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?Not all MP3 players will support Ogg Vorbis.
Why not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?
Quote from: DirtDawg on September 26, 2010, 06:00:39 PMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 25, 2010, 11:19:22 AMMy tape recorder that I have recently bought has six 1/4" ports for headphones on the left side, which is far too big for most headphones and speakers to plug into, which have 1/8" jacks. So I have ordered an 1/4" to 1/8" male to female adapter, which was 99 cents on eBay. Strangely enough, the front microphone and aux in ports are 1/8". The tape recorder does have a good speaker built in, but I'd rather plug in my computer speakers which are 2.1 and has a 1/8" jack.Here is a picture of my Eiki tape recorder, which was almost 40 dollars in total! Half of that was shipping! What ever. At this point, I pretty much think of you as a useless fake of a cunt, no matter what old shit you post about. Is that all?
Quote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:42:46 PMQuote from: DirtDawg on September 26, 2010, 06:00:39 PMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 25, 2010, 11:19:22 AMMy tape recorder that I have recently bought has six 1/4" ports for headphones on the left side, which is far too big for most headphones and speakers to plug into, which have 1/8" jacks. So I have ordered an 1/4" to 1/8" male to female adapter, which was 99 cents on eBay. Strangely enough, the front microphone and aux in ports are 1/8". The tape recorder does have a good speaker built in, but I'd rather plug in my computer speakers which are 2.1 and has a 1/8" jack.Here is a picture of my Eiki tape recorder, which was almost 40 dollars in total! Half of that was shipping! What ever. At this point, I pretty much think of you as a useless fake of a cunt, no matter what old shit you post about. Is that all?Not quite. I agree with him.
Quote from: RageBeoulve on September 27, 2010, 08:45:48 AMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:42:46 PMQuote from: DirtDawg on September 26, 2010, 06:00:39 PMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 25, 2010, 11:19:22 AMMy tape recorder that I have recently bought has six 1/4" ports for headphones on the left side, which is far too big for most headphones and speakers to plug into, which have 1/8" jacks. So I have ordered an 1/4" to 1/8" male to female adapter, which was 99 cents on eBay. Strangely enough, the front microphone and aux in ports are 1/8". The tape recorder does have a good speaker built in, but I'd rather plug in my computer speakers which are 2.1 and has a 1/8" jack.Here is a picture of my Eiki tape recorder, which was almost 40 dollars in total! Half of that was shipping! What ever. At this point, I pretty much think of you as a useless fake of a cunt, no matter what old shit you post about. Is that all?Not quite. I agree with him.I can post about whatever I see fit. If you don't like it, well too bad, so sad for YOU!
Quote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 02:41:13 PMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 12:40:04 PMQuote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 11:36:01 AMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:45:07 AMWhy not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?Not all MP3 players will support Ogg Vorbis.iRiver brand MP3 players do. But good point, because my SanDisk Sansa does not support OGG files as well. But I dislike the side effects of MP3 compression on sound, especially when it's 128 kbps or less. Sounds like a typical YouTube video.Any format will sound bad at 128 or less. Both of my iAudio (Cowon) players, as well as my phone, support Ogg, btw. I like the format but I prefer FLAC.What about AAC at 128? I really need to learn more about AAC encoding (settings) because My DSiXL only plays AACs.
Quote from: Phlexor on September 26, 2010, 07:06:43 PMQuote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 02:41:13 PMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 12:40:04 PMQuote from: odeon on September 26, 2010, 11:36:01 AMQuote from: Mudkipz on September 26, 2010, 06:45:07 AMWhy not use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3?Not all MP3 players will support Ogg Vorbis.iRiver brand MP3 players do. But good point, because my SanDisk Sansa does not support OGG files as well. But I dislike the side effects of MP3 compression on sound, especially when it's 128 kbps or less. Sounds like a typical YouTube video.Any format will sound bad at 128 or less. Both of my iAudio (Cowon) players, as well as my phone, support Ogg, btw. I like the format but I prefer FLAC.What about AAC at 128? I really need to learn more about AAC encoding (settings) because My DSiXL only plays AACs.AAC is somewhat better but I don't have a player that supports it. And in the end it sucks too.
Had to have it.