1. I found out my dad had a few years old but completely unused Phillips headphones. I immediately connected them to my iPod and the difference of quality is enormous. It's like listening to different songs when I think of using the Apple headphones.
  2. Originally posted by yuri31:I found out my dad had a few years old but completely unused Phillips headphones. I immediately connected them to my iPod and the difference of quality is enormous. It's like listening to different songs when I think of using the Apple headphones.


    If they are completely unused they will improve a lot if you listen them for more than 24 hours, than the drivers in the headphone are better balanced. Means more detail and more low freq. So it will only improve
  3. Originally posted by yuri31:I found out my dad had a few years old but completely unused Phillips headphones. I immediately connected them to my iPod and the difference of quality is enormous. It's like listening to different songs when I think of using the Apple headphones.


    Anything is better than the Apple earplugs!!!
  4. Maybe this question is better suited in this topic.....would appreciate any help!

  5. I need a little help with Itunes.

    I would like to know if it's possible to ensure two specific tracks always (without exceptions) play consecutively (together and in the right order) using this program. For example, every time I listen to IGCIIDGCT live I want SBS from the same show to follow.

    Thank you!
  6. Originally posted by carlibengarli:I need a little help with Itunes.

    I would like to know if it's possible to ensure two specific tracks always (without exceptions) play consecutively (together and in the right order) using this program. For example, every time I listen to IGCIIDGCT live I want SBS from the same show to follow.

    Thank you!


    I doubt its possible in shuffle mode. Easiest solutions is joining the files. I dont know a tool by name, but im sure those exist.


  7. Which browser are you using? Firefox has multiple plugins available for these kind of jobs
  8. Originally posted by Risto:[..]

    I doubt its possible in shuffle mode. Easiest solutions is joining the files. I dont know a tool by name, but im sure those exist.


    Try Audacity.


  9. Always works, but can degrade quality a lot if you import and export mp3 files If they are from the same bootleg (aKa same bitrate/sampling freq) then it should be possible to join mp3 files without loss of quality.
  10. Originally posted by Risto:[..]

    Always works, but can degrade quality a lot if you import and export mp3 files If they are from the same bootleg (aKa same bitrate/sampling freq) then it should be possible to join mp3 files without loss of quality.


    They should be unless he's found a better version of either song. I've done it before but when Bono shouts out a city name and then again in the next song, it doesn't quite work...
  11. Originally posted by Risto:[..]

    Always works, but can degrade quality a lot if you import and export mp3 files If they are from the same bootleg (aKa same bitrate/sampling freq) then it should be possible to join mp3 files without loss of quality.


    How is the loss less evident if the files are from the same source? They would still have to be imported and exported all the same, wouldn't they?
  12. Originally posted by carlibengarli:[..]

    How is the loss less evident if the files are from the same source? They would still have to be imported and exported all the same, wouldn't they?


    If you import and export lossless yes. But with lossy codecs with mp3 not. It goes like this:

    > Lossless source
    > Encode to MP3 (loss of data) / Usually done by taper or uploader

    Then in Audacity you do:

    > Decode to lossless
    > Paste audio data next to each other
    > Encode to MP3 (loss of data)

    So the combined file loses data twice. Undependant of bitrate.