Technics: Sound: How to make your iTunes, podcasts, earphones and other sonic techs for better listening
Here's a heavy-loaded write-up with two videos (I don't know whether they'll actually work), but I found that Don Bell's write-ups and still-graphics do. I do have iTunes but these days I don't use it miuch, as I like to find out what my world-wide circle of friends are listening to. However, this info piece makes me interested in getting my iTunes Library to work for me. Bell, a CNET How To specialist, offers a lot of clues and info-bits to make for better listening.
— Technowlb, refWrite Backpage technics newspotter, analyst, columnist
with Musikos, rW4 music
How to make iTunes sound better
(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)
Outside of CNET's software-savvy readers, I'm willing to bet that most people are unaware of the 10-band equalizer built into iTunes. Apple doesn't flaunt it the same way your boom box did back in the '80s. Instead, it's tucked under the Window menu. With it, you can dial in a personalized EQ setting, or select from one of the many presets.
(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)
Have you ever seen those car stereo buttons marked "Loud"? They punch up the sound with a little boost to the bass and treble and even make the stereo effect a little more dramatic. Well, Apple has one of those, too. It's buried in the Preferences menu under Playback settings.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
The weakest link I see in most computer listening setups is the headphones, and it is the last link in the chain before the sound hits your ears. You could be doing everything else above and beyond, playing lossless audio files output through an audiophile-quality USB audio card that was hand-wired by Gregorian monks -- but if your headphones are crud, then none of it matters. Flip the situation around, and even a modest headphone upgrade will make the worst system sound significantly better.
No comments:
Post a Comment