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Date:         Fri, 26 Feb 2010 17:03:03 -0700
Reply-To:     Tom Buese <tombuese@COMCAST.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Tom Buese <tombuese@COMCAST.NET>
Subject:      Re: Friday topic: MP3s in a vanagon?
Comments: To: Peter DiFalco <peter.difalco@GMAIL.COM>
In-Reply-To:  <d3b2fe671002261551v47866d34t503592bad5cbc02b@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed; delsp=yes

Ditto What Peter said below.

Let the stereo/Mac/PC flame wars begin!

YMMV,

Mr. BZ

On Feb 26, 2010, at 4:51 PM, Peter DiFalco wrote:

> *Hi Don,* > > *I would like to put in a plug for an iPod. I find that Apple's > iTunes is a > very simple way to organize music and to decide which playlists > (ordered, > grouped songs) go onto the iPod and which don't, in the event that you > choose not to carry around the entire shebang at once. I further > think that > Apple's attention to detail yeilds clean sound reproduction whether > you're > using headphones or a docking solution (line out). * > > In general: any MP3 player will usually play MP3s, which can vary in > quality > from poor (96 kilobyte bitrate) to practically-as-good-as-CD (320 > kilobyte > bitrate). They will also play WAV files which are exactly CD quality > but > take up far more space, 4 - 10X as much space per minute, as an > MP3. iPods > will also play Apple AAC files, which vary from near-CD quality (128 > kilobyte bitrate) to instinguishable-from-CD quality (256 kilobyte, so > called "iTunes plus") quality. > > You can use iTunes to "rip" (read: copy and convert) music from CD > to either > MP3 or AAC format to any of the different quality levels. Personally > I rip > CDs to 320k MP3 because it gives me the best sound quality and most > flexible > usage abilities, as I am also a DJ / sound manipulator. > > You can buy excellent quality MP3 or AAC files from Amazon or iTunes, > respectively. I personally consider it my right to create a digital > backup > copy of a CD that I have purchased at no additional cost but IANAL > so you > may feel differently. I also consider it my right to find and > download a > digital MP3 copy of something I have previously purchased on cassette, > 8-track or LP because hey - I've already paid the artist and label > for the > right to play this music. > > While I currently just connect the headphone output of my iPod > directly to > the line-in port on my audio deck, this is not considered the > "cleanest way" > because of problems involving matching impedance between headphone > and line > levels. A car stereo which includes a dangling iPod dock would be > better > because this ensures matching line-level impedance for cleanest sound > reproduction. > > I understand some car audio decks now come with a USB port so you > can simply > copy MP3 or WAV files directly to a USB stick drive and plug it into > your > car stereo. This sounds like a very tempting solution which obviates > the > need for a dedicated player, if you wouldn't otherwise use a > personal music > playback device. > > Obligatory Vanagon content: As soon as they're easily available from > eBay I > intend to build a robust iPod dock into my dashboard ash tray. I > believe > someone on Thesamba has done this. Will post pics if I get that off > the > ground. > > cheers, > > Peter > 89 Bluestar > iPod shuffle > iPhone > > > * > * > On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 3:08 PM, Don Hanson <dhanson928@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> OK, can someone bring me into century 2000 when it comes to music >> players >> suitable for various enviornments? I have a CD changer, a Mini-disc >> player, >> a good sound reproducing amplifier in both house and van but I know >> nothing >> of digital players like everyone seems to be using now. Do I just >> go get >> an >> MP3 player from Best Buy or Wal Mart and plug that into my current >> stuff? >> Do >> I have to buy an I-pod (whatever that is) and then re-purchase >> every song I >> like? How do I get music I have on other mediums to go into a >> computer file >> so I can send it around to all my various mechanical reproducers in >> Van and >> home? >> Can you buy software to convert recorded music to MP 3 playable >> format? >> Is there a good site anyone can suggest that would be worthwhile >> for me to >> learn this stuff from? Should I just go to Fry's electronics or >> Car toys >> and listen to a salesman's rap? Help, lost in the world of CDs and >> records >> and tapes... >> Don Hanson >>


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