Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#14
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() RCE wrote: " JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in message ... ...........a 30gb Ipod is in my future and not the 4 gb Nano. I have been importing songs from my CD's to my Itunes and now have over 6GB of music (1,462 songs), with several more CD's left to import. BTW: Itunes is a nice program and very versatile. If anyone has it I have a link to the optimal equalizer settings. Let me know if you want it. ;-) I was always an electronic gizmo and gadget nut, but for some reason the whole appeal of Ipods and the like is lost on me. Why would I possibly want thousands of poor quality, super compressed music files stored in one of these? I guess they have their purpose, whatever it is, as they seem to be very popular. RCE I'm currently eye-balling one of the Bose systems that stores several hundred hours of music from CD's. I understand that you load in the CD, ask the unit to memorize it, and a few minutes later all the data is stored in the processing unit. The CD can then be stored away in case it ever needs to be reloaded, or taken to play in the car or on the boat. I don't know whether Bose is storing the music in an mp3 format, or not, but the sound quality they are getting from a woofer and two speakers probably 3 X 6 " is absolutely amazing. My wife kicked my old stereo system out of the living room years ago, as she couldn't stand four "big box" speakers and all the wires, etc. For about $1700, you cannow get a system that sounds better (to my ears) than what $4000 used to buy- back when $4000 was real money. I know that Bose also offers 12-volt units- has anybody tried one of these on a boat and are they as astonishing as the home systems? |