[all-audio] goldwave help

2018-05-19 Thread The Wolf
Hello is there any way to tell goldwave not to open the manual every 
time I launch it?


it is really anoying.

thanks

Hank


--
check out my song on youtube
https://youtu.be/YeWgx2LRu7Y


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Re: [all-audio] most accessible way to use RTLSDR

2018-05-19 Thread The Wolf

Hello

you can try the kiwi sdr
I personally don't run this but people who use kiwi to run the sdrs on linux
if you go to
www.sdr.hu
you can find a list of receivers online to listen to people do use kiwi sdr
if you do get a kiwi sdr set up then you can tune the sdr via the web
it is really confusing and I am not doing a good job on describing
anyways below is the list of kiwi keyboard shortcuts to tune sdr radios 
via browser

I have been working with the developer on getting them emplimented
his name is john
if any other visually impaired people can right him with any 
improvements on the keyboard shortcuts feel free and email him

before I forget when he gave me the shortcuts he put them together
in one huge list so you will have to use your screen readers read by 
word to get the proper shortcuts
also he has been updating the software quite alot so any feedback he 
could use would help with him getting all the quirks out on the shortcut 
keys

now on to the good stuff
On 5/11/2018 12:49 AM, j...@kiwisdr.com wrote:
Okay. Let me know if this list if okay:

g =        select frequency entry field
j k        frequency step down/up, add shift or ctrl/alt for faster
LR-arrow-keys    same as “j” and “k” keys

t T        scroll frequency memory list
a l u c f i    select mode: AM LSB USB CW NBFM IQ
p P        passband widen/narrow
z Z        zoom in/out, add ctrl/alt for max in/out
< >        waterfall page down/up
w W        waterfall min dB slider +/- 1 dB, add ctrl/alt for +/- 10 dB
S        waterfall auto-scale
s d        spectrum on/off toggle, slow device mode
v V m        volume less/more, mute
o        toggle between option bar "off" and "stats" mode,others 
selected by related shortcut key

esc        close/cancel action
? h        toggle this help list
On 5/19/2018 3:57 PM, Aman Singer wrote:

Hi all,

  


 I think this has come up before, but if it did, it was a
while ago and this area changes constantly. What has the general experience
been with the RTLSDR and software for devices like it? Is there a clearly
more accessible and usable software option, either for Windows or Linux, to
get this working smoothly? Is there an option which is hopelessly
inaccessible? I have a Raspberry PI which I'd like to use, but can obviously
install any flavor of Linux on a VM and also have both Windows 7 and 10.

Thanks,

Aman

  








--
check out my song on youtube
https://youtu.be/YeWgx2LRu7Y


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Re: [all-audio] tagging music

2018-05-19 Thread Curtis Delzer
mp3 tag.
-
Curtis Delzer, HS.
WB6HEF
San Bernardino, CA

On Sat, 19 May 2018 08:51:26 -0400
"John Heath via Groups.Io" 

Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

2018-05-19 Thread Dane Trethowan
Ah sorry? I don’t follow.


> On 20 May 2018, at 6:32 am, Mary Otten  wrote:
> 
> How did you get this? Was it an email to you? Are you on their list? Just 
> curious. I wonder if Leo got it.
> 
> 
> On 5/19/2018 1:31 PM, Dane Trethowan wrote:
>> Yep, you could use an Intel Nuc as a VPN and media player without any 
>> trouble at all as I can do with mine, I successfully used it yesterday.
>> You need a VPN Client from a particular VPN company of your choice - I use 
>> Witopia given the 24/7 support I’m able to get and accessibility of the 
>> client.
>> If you’re going to use an Intel Nuc for this sort of thing then you 
>> certainly don’t need anything too powerful.
>> 
>> 
>>> On 20 May 2018, at 4:19 am, Hamit Campos  wrote:
>>> 
>>> I'm sure you could do the surver thing. But Dain would know better. As for 
>>> what people do with these little things I've heard of people hooking them 
>>> to the TV and using them as a Media Center of sorts. Which is pointless now 
>>> thanks a lot Microsoft. Yeah yeah there's Plex and stuff but I don't know 
>>> how all that compairs in epicness to Windows Media Center.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 5/19/2018 2:15 PM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
 Hi!
 Ok, this might sound like i am going to bash all these machines people 
 seem to have in there houses but i am just curious.
 Myself i have a mac mini from 2011 a macbook air which is my daily 
 computer and a very old pc from 2009 which i have linux on.
 I have 2 raspberry pie’s which i don’t know what to do with them and 2 
 ipad minis an Iphone SE and my nokia 8 for daily use.
 So i also have a lot of units.
 But i am very curious on what you all who have these nuk’s and rasperry 
 pies and other small intresting units do with them?
 What can you do in regards to audio and video on these machines.
 Can you have for example a raspberry pie 3 as a vpn server so that i can 
 listen through that device to bbc 5 Live which i really want to do.
 I guess you can have these things for many tasks but my inspiration is 
 gone right now so i am really wondering i have to have these machines 
 around.
 /A
 
> 19 maj 2018 kl. 11:56 skrev Dane Trethowan :
> 
> Thanks for this and I followed up the Gigabyte Brix.
> I have two of the Intel Nuc basic versions running at the moment so 
> obviously my third box for want of a better description was going to be 
> something a little more powerful, the Brix and Nuc both offer an Intel I7 
> that would fit my specifications so now the question is which one to buy?
> If anyone’s looking at the basic Nuc and Brix? Well they’re similar but 
> the Nuc does have 2 USB 3.0 ports whereas the Brix has 4 USB 2.0 ports, 
> something to think about.
> On the audio side the Intel Nuc has 3 outputs, analogue, SPDIF and HDMI 
> for audio.
> I use one of my  Intel Nuc machines with JAWS and FS Reader as a 
> dedicated portable DAISLY player.
> 
> 
>> On 17 May 2018, at 1:34 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:
>> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>>  There are many boxes like this and like you, Dane, I think they're 
>> excellent. They're particularly good for blind users, running with no 
>> screen is simple and they are easy to move and run off a battery if 
>> necessary. My favourite are the Gigabyte Brix models, but I have used 
>> both the Zotac Zbox and the Intel NUC. All work well.
>> Aman
>> 
>> 
>> -Original Message-
>> From: all-audio@groups.io [mailto:all-audio@groups.io] On Behalf Of Dane 
>> Trethowan
>> Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2018 6:32 AM
>> To: all-audio@groups.io
>> Subject: [all-audio] Intel Nuc
>> 
>> Hi!
>> For those looking for a box to use as say a media player by the bedside 
>> or something to hook up to the entertainment system in the lounge then 
>> you might like to take a look at some of Intel’s Nuc offerings.
>> I’ve built several of these machines here and what amazes me about the 
>> Nuc is what you get in the package.
>> I have one of the basic models in front of me on the desktop now, its 
>> around 4 inches square by 3 inches high and yet its dripping with 
>> functionality all over it.
>> Starting on the top lower left hand corner is the power button.
>> On the front panel are 2 USB 3.0 ports
>> On the left hand side is a SD card reader And on the back are 2 USB 3.0 
>> ports, input for a power adapter, a HDMI port, headphones/optical 
>> digital audio out, VGA Video port and LAN port .
>> So that’s the connectors and then there’s the built-in stuff like Wi-Fi 
>> and Bluetooth connectivity.
>> This model is only a Dual Core unit running at 2.6GHZ but fast enough to 
>> browse the web, play media files, watch video and so on, I’ve not seen 

Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

2018-05-19 Thread Mary Otten
How did you get this? Was it an email to you? Are you on their list? 
Just curious. I wonder if Leo got it.



On 5/19/2018 1:31 PM, Dane Trethowan wrote:

Yep, you could use an Intel Nuc as a VPN and media player without any trouble 
at all as I can do with mine, I successfully used it yesterday.
You need a VPN Client from a particular VPN company of your choice - I use 
Witopia given the 24/7 support I’m able to get and accessibility of the client.
If you’re going to use an Intel Nuc for this sort of thing then you certainly 
don’t need anything too powerful.



On 20 May 2018, at 4:19 am, Hamit Campos  wrote:

I'm sure you could do the surver thing. But Dain would know better. As for what 
people do with these little things I've heard of people hooking them to the TV 
and using them as a Media Center of sorts. Which is pointless now thanks a lot 
Microsoft. Yeah yeah there's Plex and stuff but I don't know how all that 
compairs in epicness to Windows Media Center.


On 5/19/2018 2:15 PM, Anders Holmberg wrote:

Hi!
Ok, this might sound like i am going to bash all these machines people seem to 
have in there houses but i am just curious.
Myself i have a mac mini from 2011 a macbook air which is my daily computer and 
a very old pc from 2009 which i have linux on.
I have 2 raspberry pie’s which i don’t know what to do with them and 2 ipad 
minis an Iphone SE and my nokia 8 for daily use.
So i also have a lot of units.
But i am very curious on what you all who have these nuk’s and rasperry pies 
and other small intresting units do with them?
What can you do in regards to audio and video on these machines.
Can you have for example a raspberry pie 3 as a vpn server so that i can listen 
through that device to bbc 5 Live which i really want to do.
I guess you can have these things for many tasks but my inspiration is gone 
right now so i am really wondering i have to have these machines around.
/A


19 maj 2018 kl. 11:56 skrev Dane Trethowan :

Thanks for this and I followed up the Gigabyte Brix.
I have two of the Intel Nuc basic versions running at the moment so obviously 
my third box for want of a better description was going to be something a 
little more powerful, the Brix and Nuc both offer an Intel I7 that would fit my 
specifications so now the question is which one to buy?
If anyone’s looking at the basic Nuc and Brix? Well they’re similar but the Nuc 
does have 2 USB 3.0 ports whereas the Brix has 4 USB 2.0 ports, something to 
think about.
On the audio side the Intel Nuc has 3 outputs, analogue, SPDIF and HDMI for 
audio.
I use one of my  Intel Nuc machines with JAWS and FS Reader as a dedicated 
portable DAISLY player.



On 17 May 2018, at 1:34 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:

Hi,

There are many boxes like this and like you, Dane, I think they're 
excellent. They're particularly good for blind users, running with no screen is 
simple and they are easy to move and run off a battery if necessary. My 
favourite are the Gigabyte Brix models, but I have used both the Zotac Zbox and 
the Intel NUC. All work well.
Aman


-Original Message-
From: all-audio@groups.io [mailto:all-audio@groups.io] On Behalf Of Dane 
Trethowan
Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2018 6:32 AM
To: all-audio@groups.io
Subject: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

Hi!
For those looking for a box to use as say a media player by the bedside or 
something to hook up to the entertainment system in the lounge then you might 
like to take a look at some of Intel’s Nuc offerings.
I’ve built several of these machines here and what amazes me about the Nuc is 
what you get in the package.
I have one of the basic models in front of me on the desktop now, its around 4 
inches square by 3 inches high and yet its dripping with functionality all over 
it.
Starting on the top lower left hand corner is the power button.
On the front panel are 2 USB 3.0 ports
On the left hand side is a SD card reader And on the back are 2 USB 3.0 ports, 
input for a power adapter, a HDMI port, headphones/optical digital audio out, 
VGA Video port and LAN port .
So that’s the connectors and then there’s the built-in stuff like Wi-Fi and 
Bluetooth connectivity.
This model is only a Dual Core unit running at 2.6GHZ but fast enough to browse 
the web, play media files, watch video and so on, I’ve not seen any 
sluggishness yet in all my tests with the Nuc machines I’ve had and again I’m 
using the very basic models.
This particular machine I’m using has 8GB of RAM installed and a 500GB to boot 
though storage wasn’t really an issue given the connectivity of this machine 
and given I have NAS storage available.
So a nice little piece of kit, the Nuc including parts worked out to well under 
$500.
I had to purchase the RAM and the Hard drive.
There are stores on eBay who will build the machine up to your particular 
specifications.

























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Re: [all-audio] tagging music

2018-05-19 Thread Joe Paton via Groups.Io
Hi John,

Probably can't do this till tommorrow, but will do as early as I can.

In the middle of re-configuring a new install of windows 10 on an office
computer.


Joe Paton
telephone: 01702 543624
Mobile: 0 7 9 6 7 3 8 2 9 6 4
 web site: http://www.apart.org



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Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

2018-05-19 Thread Dane Trethowan
Yep, you could use an Intel Nuc as a VPN and media player without any trouble 
at all as I can do with mine, I successfully used it yesterday.
You need a VPN Client from a particular VPN company of your choice - I use 
Witopia given the 24/7 support I’m able to get and accessibility of the client.
If you’re going to use an Intel Nuc for this sort of thing then you certainly 
don’t need anything too powerful.


> On 20 May 2018, at 4:19 am, Hamit Campos  wrote:
> 
> I'm sure you could do the surver thing. But Dain would know better. As for 
> what people do with these little things I've heard of people hooking them to 
> the TV and using them as a Media Center of sorts. Which is pointless now 
> thanks a lot Microsoft. Yeah yeah there's Plex and stuff but I don't know how 
> all that compairs in epicness to Windows Media Center.
> 
> 
> On 5/19/2018 2:15 PM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
>> Hi!
>> Ok, this might sound like i am going to bash all these machines people seem 
>> to have in there houses but i am just curious.
>> Myself i have a mac mini from 2011 a macbook air which is my daily computer 
>> and a very old pc from 2009 which i have linux on.
>> I have 2 raspberry pie’s which i don’t know what to do with them and 2 ipad 
>> minis an Iphone SE and my nokia 8 for daily use.
>> So i also have a lot of units.
>> But i am very curious on what you all who have these nuk’s and rasperry pies 
>> and other small intresting units do with them?
>> What can you do in regards to audio and video on these machines.
>> Can you have for example a raspberry pie 3 as a vpn server so that i can 
>> listen through that device to bbc 5 Live which i really want to do.
>> I guess you can have these things for many tasks but my inspiration is gone 
>> right now so i am really wondering i have to have these machines around.
>> /A
>> 
>>> 19 maj 2018 kl. 11:56 skrev Dane Trethowan :
>>> 
>>> Thanks for this and I followed up the Gigabyte Brix.
>>> I have two of the Intel Nuc basic versions running at the moment so 
>>> obviously my third box for want of a better description was going to be 
>>> something a little more powerful, the Brix and Nuc both offer an Intel I7 
>>> that would fit my specifications so now the question is which one to buy?
>>> If anyone’s looking at the basic Nuc and Brix? Well they’re similar but the 
>>> Nuc does have 2 USB 3.0 ports whereas the Brix has 4 USB 2.0 ports, 
>>> something to think about.
>>> On the audio side the Intel Nuc has 3 outputs, analogue, SPDIF and HDMI for 
>>> audio.
>>> I use one of my  Intel Nuc machines with JAWS and FS Reader as a dedicated 
>>> portable DAISLY player.
>>> 
>>> 
 On 17 May 2018, at 1:34 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
There are many boxes like this and like you, Dane, I think they're 
 excellent. They're particularly good for blind users, running with no 
 screen is simple and they are easy to move and run off a battery if 
 necessary. My favourite are the Gigabyte Brix models, but I have used both 
 the Zotac Zbox and the Intel NUC. All work well.
 Aman
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: all-audio@groups.io [mailto:all-audio@groups.io] On Behalf Of Dane 
 Trethowan
 Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2018 6:32 AM
 To: all-audio@groups.io
 Subject: [all-audio] Intel Nuc
 
 Hi!
 For those looking for a box to use as say a media player by the bedside or 
 something to hook up to the entertainment system in the lounge then you 
 might like to take a look at some of Intel’s Nuc offerings.
 I’ve built several of these machines here and what amazes me about the Nuc 
 is what you get in the package.
 I have one of the basic models in front of me on the desktop now, its 
 around 4 inches square by 3 inches high and yet its dripping with 
 functionality all over it.
 Starting on the top lower left hand corner is the power button.
 On the front panel are 2 USB 3.0 ports
 On the left hand side is a SD card reader And on the back are 2 USB 3.0 
 ports, input for a power adapter, a HDMI port, headphones/optical digital 
 audio out, VGA Video port and LAN port .
 So that’s the connectors and then there’s the built-in stuff like Wi-Fi 
 and Bluetooth connectivity.
 This model is only a Dual Core unit running at 2.6GHZ but fast enough to 
 browse the web, play media files, watch video and so on, I’ve not seen any 
 sluggishness yet in all my tests with the Nuc machines I’ve had and again 
 I’m using the very basic models.
 This particular machine I’m using has 8GB of RAM installed and a 500GB to 
 boot though storage wasn’t really an issue given the connectivity of this 
 machine and given I have NAS storage available.
 So a nice little piece of kit, the Nuc including parts worked out to well 
 under $500.
 I had to purchase the 

Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

2018-05-19 Thread Dane Trethowan
My attitude is a simple one, if you have all those machines around then you may 
as well use them as best you can though regarding the raspberry Pi given their 
price - if you’ve had them for a while - then its more than likely that far 
more powerful Pi’s are available now so say goodbye to the old and buy the new 
for the same price you paid for the old, around $30 in my case.
Using a Pad for a VPN is a great idea, a dedicated VPN unit away from your main 
machines so set the Pi to whatever VPN you need and off you go, I have a Pi 
using XBMC that can do this very thing, I got the whole project in kit form 
thus came with it some very useful accessories which made using the device more 
fun, a remote control unit that plugs into one the Pi’s USB ports, this is the 
transmitter for the supplied infra read remote control, a Wi-Fi dongle for 
connecting to the Internet etc.
Once the Pi with this XBMC installed software was on the network then it was 
easy to further enhance the control with the XBMC Media App for your IOS or 
Android phone.
I have a Raspberry Pi - one of the older Pi’s - controlling my Doorbell system, 
got the kit from the United Kingdom through eBay.
My doorbell system does several things along with ringing a standard electro 
mechanical doorbell when the button is pressed.
The most exciting thing about the system as it stands right now is the 
fingerprint reader installed where the light would normally go behind the 
button thus the Pi can recognise fingerprints and you can assign labels to each.
Next the Pi can eMail and send you a text SMS, the Pi has Network connectivity 
to do this.
As well as the electro mechanical doorbell ringing the Pi is able to play MP3 
files for you to hear and I’ve mounted a bluetooth speaker just inside the 
front door to take advantage of this given the latest Pi I upgraded to for this 
project has Bluetooth so why not take advantage of it.
Depending on how you feel you may need a little help wiring up but you’d be 
surprised just how simple everything is, plenty of examples of bell tones, 
plenty of files to edit - scripts - with plenty of examples of how things work 
etc.
And finally I have a Raspberry Pi here which is a dedicated field recorder.
What are the recording limitations? Well that’s precisely up to the hardware 
you’re using to record from so the better the attributes of the sound device 
then the better quality recordings you can make.
The Mac mini is a true champion when it comes to audio as it has both analogue 
and digital inputs and outputs along with plenty of USB ports to keep you 
going, I’m assuming your 2011 Mac mini is much the same design as my late 2012 
Model.
Audio Hijack on such a machine turns the Mac into a master of audio 
manipulation.
The latest Sound Forge for Mac is a very nice app now and most of the App is 
accessible - I say most - so you can go down that route for Audio Editing or 
use something like the classic Amadeus Pro, Sound Studio etc which for the 
price demanded are excellent value for money audio tools


> On 20 May 2018, at 4:15 am, Anders Holmberg  wrote:
> 
> Hi!
> Ok, this might sound like i am going to bash all these machines people seem 
> to have in there houses but i am just curious.
> Myself i have a mac mini from 2011 a macbook air which is my daily computer 
> and a very old pc from 2009 which i have linux on.
> I have 2 raspberry pie’s which i don’t know what to do with them and 2 ipad 
> minis an Iphone SE and my nokia 8 for daily use.
> So i also have a lot of units.
> But i am very curious on what you all who have these nuk’s and rasperry pies 
> and other small intresting units do with them?
> What can you do in regards to audio and video on these machines.
> Can you have for example a raspberry pie 3 as a vpn server so that i can 
> listen through that device to bbc 5 Live which i really want to do.
> I guess you can have these things for many tasks but my inspiration is gone 
> right now so i am really wondering i have to have these machines around.
> /A
> 
>> 19 maj 2018 kl. 11:56 skrev Dane Trethowan :
>> 
>> Thanks for this and I followed up the Gigabyte Brix.
>> I have two of the Intel Nuc basic versions running at the moment so 
>> obviously my third box for want of a better description was going to be 
>> something a little more powerful, the Brix and Nuc both offer an Intel I7 
>> that would fit my specifications so now the question is which one to buy?
>> If anyone’s looking at the basic Nuc and Brix? Well they’re similar but the 
>> Nuc does have 2 USB 3.0 ports whereas the Brix has 4 USB 2.0 ports, 
>> something to think about.
>> On the audio side the Intel Nuc has 3 outputs, analogue, SPDIF and HDMI for 
>> audio.
>> I use one of my  Intel Nuc machines with JAWS and FS Reader as a dedicated 
>> portable DAISLY player.
>> 
>> 
>>> On 17 May 2018, at 1:34 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:
>>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> 

Re: [all-audio] Notice on recording with the Stream.

2018-05-19 Thread Anders Holmberg
Hi!
THe Nokia 8 n in my opinion is one of the best units i’ve ever recorded with.
Even though its a phone it can really be used for recording.
/A

> 18 maj 2018 kl. 05:29 skrev Jamie Kelly :
> 
> Yes the recording quality is much poorer in my view over the original stream. 
> HW say the recording quality is better with the VR trek but don't have one to 
> test.
> 
> Jamie
> 
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: all-audio@groups.io  On Behalf Of Hamit Campos
> Sent: Friday, 18 May 2018 9:07 AM
> To: all-audio@groups.io
> Subject: Re: [all-audio] Notice on recording with the Stream.
> 
> Hmmm I'd have to hear it for my self. But the hiss most likely 
> is just floor from the victor's pre amps. Also don't know your mike so 
> don't wana judge too harshly but some Audio-Technica mikes do have a bit 
> of self noise as it's called. My AT-8022 has some. But much much less 
> then the AT-822 that Neal has and Michael Lang had. Ah Michael Lang. He 
> was an epic reviewer. What a great lause.
> 
> 
> On 5/17/2018 6:39 PM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
>> Hi!
>> Just for Giggles i sat down right now and tried a mic i got from a friend.
>> Its a quite good audio technica mic.
>> I plugged it into the vr stream and did a test recording with it.
>> It worked just fine exept that there were some hissing but only when i was 
>> recording.
>> THen i recorded with the built-in  mic and was noticing a kind of hissing / 
>> beep sound while recording.
>> Its hard to hear that when you use the speaker of the stream but if you use 
>> for example a pair of B p7 youu deffinetly hear it.
>> There is no problem with the recording and hearing of my voice.
>> Its not distorted nor to low.
>> Just that odd sound in the background and to be honest i don’t get  the idea 
>> on having a built-in mic which prduces so much background sound.
>> But it may also be other components of the stream that causes this.
>> Note that this is beeing noticed on two stream second generation i have.
>> SO i don’t think its an error.
>> I have done a lot of recordings with my streams but only when its silent in 
>> a room this sound is heard so its probably not a big deal for most people.
>> But for me its quite disturbing.
>> /A
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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[all-audio] tagging music

2018-05-19 Thread John Heath via Groups.Io
I’m looking for tagging program that’s blind friendly; does it exist?

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Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc

2018-05-19 Thread Dane Trethowan
I use an Anker Powerrbank but I’ve never worried about battery levels to be 
honest, I get a feel for how long the bank seems to last.
In the case of Windows its a bit of a problem as Windows can’t tell whether 
you’re using Battery or power.


> On 19 May 2018, at 8:18 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:
> 
> Hi Dane and all,
> 
>   Keep in mind that the NUC and its competitors are actually comparatively
> large. For recording, and if you don't want much power, there are what are
> called stick PCs like the Zbox pi series, the MeegoPad series, some
> Asus units, etc. These are smaller than the NUC/Brix/Zbox B series,
> they are powered from USB (5 V up to 4 A), and run Windows if you want
> them to. I used one strictly as a recorder and it worked very well
> with a USB sound card (I wanted RCA input and that was the quickest
> and cheapest way to get it). They're also cheaper than the NUC/Brix
> units though obviously, given the processors, less powerful. I
> wouldn't transcode huge amounts of audio on them, but for recording,
> their size and their running a real operating system is quite a step
> forward.
> Aman
> 
> 
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: all-audio@groups.io [mailto:all-audio@groups.io] On Behalf Of Dane
> Trethowan
> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2018 5:26 PM
> To: all-audio@groups.io
> Subject: Re: [all-audio] Intel Nuc
> 
> Ah so that’s what the Gigabyte models are known as Brix, I’ll follow those
> up as they have a good reputation.
> The other one that people might look at is the Neo Windows Box I think its
> called, there’s a Neo Android if you want to go down that route which I have
> also done, lovely little boxes.
> Anyway back to the Nuc, I have it connected to my Yamaha AS-2000 Amplifier
> via my Soundblaster Audio HD and am very much enjoying it.
> I’m going to install Total Recorder on the machine later to see how well
> that’s handled, I don’t foresee any problems and of course there’s some good
> tests to be had with the coverage of the Royal Wedding today, something I
> won’t myself be listening to but its an excuse to have a recorder running
> for a PC test .
> 
> 
>> On 17 May 2018, at 1:34 pm, Aman Singer  wrote:
>> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>>  There are many boxes like this and like you, Dane, I think they're
>> excellent. They're particularly good for blind users, running with no
>> screen is simple and they are easy to move and run off a battery if
>> necessary. My favourite are the Gigabyte Brix models, but I have used both
>> the Zotac Zbox and the Intel NUC. All work well.
>> Aman
>> 
>> 
>> -Original Message-
>> From: all-audio@groups.io [mailto:all-audio@groups.io] On Behalf Of
>> Dane Trethowan
>> Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2018 6:32 AM
>> To: all-audio@groups.io
>> Subject: [all-audio] Intel Nuc
>> 
>> Hi!
>> For those looking for a box to use as say a media player by the bedside or
>> something to hook up to the entertainment system in the lounge then you
>> might like to take a look at some of Intel’s Nuc offerings.
>> I’ve built several of these machines here and what amazes me about the Nuc
>> is what you get in the package.
>> I have one of the basic models in front of me on the desktop now, its
>> around 4 inches square by 3 inches high and yet its dripping with
>> functionality all over it.
>> Starting on the top lower left hand corner is the power button.
>> On the front panel are 2 USB 3.0 ports On the left hand side is a SD
>> card reader And on the back are 2 USB 3.0 ports, input for a power
>> adapter, a HDMI port, headphones/optical digital audio out, VGA Video port
>> and LAN port .
>> So that’s the connectors and then there’s the built-in stuff like Wi-Fi
>> and Bluetooth connectivity.
>> This model is only a Dual Core unit running at 2.6GHZ but fast enough to
>> browse the web, play media files, watch video and so on, I’ve not seen any
>> sluggishness yet in all my tests with the Nuc machines I’ve had and again
>> I’m using the very basic models.
>> This particular machine I’m using has 8GB of RAM installed and a 500GB to
>> boot though storage wasn’t really an issue given the connectivity of this
>> machine and given I have NAS storage available.
>> So a nice little piece of kit, the Nuc including parts worked out to well
>> under $500.
>> I had to purchase the RAM and the Hard drive.
>> There are stores on eBay who will build the machine up to your particular
>> specifications.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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[all-audio] Olympus LS-100

2018-05-19 Thread George Zaynoun

Hello!

When I search for it on Amazon I get something they refer to as 
standard edition, something they add the word radio to it hence comes 
the question are there different models of this or what? They have 
different prices, are they the same but they send different things with 
each? Please chime in and help, I am serching amazon.co.uk and is 
feeling lost, thanks.


--
Georges Zeinoun
Timmerv. 6A ITR LGH1102, 54163 SKÖVDESWEDEN
Tel: +46 (500) 48 29 29 Mobile: +46 (70) 366 63 29

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