OK, that will help -- thanks.

Mary Otten <maryot...@comcast.net> wrote:

> Well, John already reported about most of the controls in his initial
> post on this topic. And that certainly helped. There is one side of the
> device which could be thought of like the spine of a book. It has no
> controls and is completely covered by the leather casing. If you have
> the ha-2 lying on a table with that side facing you, on the left end,
> from closest to you to furthest away, you have a small knob which turns
> the device on with an audible click and adjusts volume up as you turn,
> like an old-fashioned radio on/off knob. Moving on that same end but
> away from you, you have aan imput which is for I think John said is for
> line out to active speakers, but is also for analog in. Not sure how
> that works, and I didn't pay attention, since I don't have anything for
> that. Then last input on that end is for your headphones.  On the long
> side that is furthest away from you, first control on the left is a
> button which you can press in and shows the charge level of the device.
> Inaccessible, of course. That is the one thing I wish it had, a way to
> tell how much charge remains if you can't see the lights. Moving to the
> right, you have the two position bass boost switch, and then next to it
> moving to the right is the two position high/low gain switch. Finally,
> on the right end of the device,  you have, from back to front, a small
> usb input, which is for connecting a computer or an android device, a
> "regular" usb for connecting Apple i-devices and finally, a 3 position
> slider which selects the input, a b or c, corresponding to the analog
> in and the two usb ports. 
> 
> There are 3 small cables included with the device, a usb to lightning,
> one with two small usb plugs on it for the small input on the device
> and for a usb to go out on an android device, and finallyone for the
> analog. Sorry I never can remember the nomenclature, which is usb b or
> a or whatever, but it is obvious when you look at the cables what goes
> where. And there is a wall plug and a much longer cable that has a usb
> plut that fits into the wall charger, and the other end fits into the
> small usb input on the device where you would normally plug in the
> android or computer audio source.  You are suppose to be able to charge
> your i-phone from this device. I'm not sure how that works. I did have
> my ipad plugged in last night, listenig to some music, and it was not
> charging, according to voice over. In any case, I don't think I'd want
> to use this as a charger for my mobile device and be listening to music
> at the same time. Maybe you can't even do that.
> 
> There is documentation in print that comes with the device, but I
> haven't tried scanning it. It may be on the oppo website in a more or
> less accessible form, but I have not looked there either. Hope that
> helped. Probably way too long.
> 
> Mary
> 
> 

-- 
Your life is like a penny.  You're going to lose it.  The question is:
How do
you spend it?

         John Covici
         cov...@ccs.covici.com

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