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#1
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Paying for XM is just stupid.....
To each his own I guess. With XM, I don't have to worry about "using some hobbled up, record company approved, filtering software that makes you do them one-at-a-time," or copying "the files onto a massive portable hard drive you can plug into your laptop on the boat in MP3 format." I especially don't need to worry about carrying a condom and making sure the open end is down in my pocket, to keep things dry. g I just turn it on and listen. Plus, I don't care how fancy an mp3 player you can buy, it just cannot get live "out of market" baseball broadcasts. This last point is the real reason I got XM in the first place... for the Red Sox. All the music is just an extra as far as I'm concerned.;-) Just my point of view. Like I said, to each his own. --Mike "Larry" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote in ups.com: 3. What are the pros and cons of memory cards, mp3 CD's, CD changers, separate iPod's etc? There's a real smorgasbord og choices now available. Ask it ONE important question...... Can I use Windows Explorer to simply copy a whole directory of MP3 music files to the player, or its external memory card, and play it WITHOUT using some hobbled up, record company approved, filtering software that makes you do them one-at-a-time. God some of 'em suck moving music to the player. The computer should treat the player as just an external hard drive copying files to....not filtering the files looking for illegal file sharing which sucks even if you're not downloading like mad from alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.(your favorite genre here) newsgroups..... Copy the files onto a massive portable hard drive you can plug into your laptop on the boat in MP3 format. I just bought a Western Digital MyBook USB hard drive, a whopping 750GB, for $179 on sale at Best Buy. This book-sized hard drive will store movies and music for a whole year in one, small package.....not 250 fragile CDs all scratched up and unplayable in a car stereo player that's gonna crap, soon, on a boat. Plug the hard drive into the laptop and the memory card or memory MP3 player in, too. Copy what you want to listen to on this watch to the player and tuck it in your pocket. Mine is a 2GB Sansa the size of a woman's lipstick case with color LCD screen, FM Radio, voice recorder... $80 on sale: http://www.sandisk.com/Products/Cata...sa_Express_MP3 _Players.aspx 500 songs fit on its INTERNAL memory (2GB) and you can ADD another 2GB with the external MicroSD very tiny memory module for $20 more from Newegg.com. (I'm using Kingston memory now, lifetime warranty and they replaced a bad one with no problem for free!) You won't have to reload 1000 songs often. That's 64 hours without hearing the same song twice. It also has random mode to shuffle the deck. The Sansa Express IS a USB plug...which runs 15 hours of continuous play before you simply plug it into the computer for an hour to rapidly recharge its lithium-polymer advanced battery pack.....all for $79! (c; A condom would make a great waterproof carrying case in bad weather...(c; Just put the open end with the headphone wire coming out of it DOWN in your pocket. To play through the boat's stereo is easy....use an FM stereo transmitter like: http://tinyurl.com/3axoru I particularly like this model, though have never owned one, because the whole transmitter is built right into a common 12V plug already in the boats. If you want to play to the whole boat, not just yourself, plug this cheap transmitter into the headphone jack on the tiny Sansa player for days of unrepeated music you can also carry ashore, in your car, listen privately in bed without disturbing HER...a real feature...(c; (NOTE - The $150 FM transmitters sound EXACTLY like the $15 ones on any radio.) Larry -- Paying for XM is just stupid..... |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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XM is a great place to get ammo for your MP3 player.
Just record the data stream from the web cast, chop it up with a sound editor and rip it to MP3. It is where I get some of the old stuff they play on "Bluesville" that you really can't find at Wal-Mart Hehe, that's exactly what I do. I don't even bother to chop it up. I'll just grab the stream from DirecTV and record a huge mp3 to a cd-rw, and play it in my truck. When I get to the ends, I do it again (on the same CD). I only have XM in my boat. --Mike wrote in message ... On Thu, 13 Sep 2007 08:12:29 -0700, "Mike" wrote: Paying for XM is just stupid..... To each his own I guess. With XM, I don't have to worry about "using some hobbled up, record company approved, filtering software that makes you do them one-at-a-time," or copying "the files onto a massive portable hard drive you can plug into your laptop on the boat in MP3 format." I especially don't need to worry about carrying a condom and making sure the open end is down in my pocket, to keep things dry. g I just turn it on and listen. Plus, I don't care how fancy an mp3 player you can buy, it just cannot get live "out of market" baseball broadcasts. This last point is the real reason I got XM in the first place... for the Red Sox. All the music is just an extra as far as I'm concerned.;-) Just my point of view. Like I said, to each his own. --Mike XM is a great place to get ammo for your MP3 player. Just record the data stream from the web cast, chop it up with a sound editor and rip it to MP3. It is where I get some of the old stuff they play on "Bluesville" that you really can't find at Wal-Mart. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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LOL! I did the same thing with 8-tracks. Thinking back to those days is what
made me start recording XM. --Mike wrote in message ... On Thu, 13 Sep 2007 19:15:09 -0700, "Mike" wrote: Hehe, that's exactly what I do. I don't even bother to chop it up. I'll just grab the stream from DirecTV and record a huge mp3 to a cd-rw, and play it in my truck. When I get to the ends, I do it again (on the same CD). I only have XM in my boat. I did that on 8 tracks before some of these folks were born. Back in the olden days they would run FM shows in the middle of the night without many commercials. I could set up my recorder to make a tape from 2 to 3:30 and have a good tape to play in the daytime when it was all commercials all the time. What I like about digital music is it is very easy to go in and chop out any particular song you want. I have an old copy of Sound Forge that will let you do tricks with sound that would dazzle a recording studio engineer 20 years ago. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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wrote in news:2itje3pvc3g57h6dis94jrhlmj2dn1ocb0@
4ax.com: What I like about digital music is it is very easy to go in and chop out any particular song you want. I have an old copy of Sound Forge that will let you do tricks with sound that would dazzle a recording studio engineer 20 years ago. You guys might want to look at "Total Recorder" from www.totalrecorder.com Total Recorder sits between whatever is playing and your soundcard, like a proxy server. I can also simulate a soundcard to record in silence as fast as the server will send it, much faster than X1 speed play. Total Recorder will rip ANY audio from ANY source on the net, webpages, Realaudio, WMP, any secure player, any sound input (digital or audio). It's later versions have a neat intellegent recording function for those late night recordings! Total Recorder now turns individual songs DIRECTLY into MP3 separate files, complete with functions to strip off the 2 second deadtime, etc. It will automatically rip like this from any source, including very high speed conversions of your CD collection direct to whatever speed MP3 compression you select. All you do is change CDs. Works great with its own normalization, DC offset, a full compander to level some awful recordings or streams. It also has a clock so it can start recording that XM or internet stream and stop it as you select. The scheduler has lots of modes and options. TR is not free, but you get lifetime upgrades for a pittance.... To catalog/search/play/log your extensive MP3 collection, I recommend a Russian program "MP3 Catalog Pro" from www.wizetech.com, the blazingly fastest MP3 catalogger on the planet. It's not free either but is cheap. It automatically creates a catalog of any and all MP3s on your system, reading the IDx tags off all MP3s it finds for instant searching through thousands of songs as fast as you can click. Drag the desired search results to another folder to burn or Winamp's playlist to play works great. Dragging to Nero burner also works flawlessly...in digital or CD mode. Just thought you'd like this information.....Sorry it won't switch XM channels from its scheduler...(c; Maybe in the future if there's a demand. Larry -- |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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I will check it out. Thanks!
--Mike "Larry" wrote in message ... wrote in news:2itje3pvc3g57h6dis94jrhlmj2dn1ocb0@ 4ax.com: What I like about digital music is it is very easy to go in and chop out any particular song you want. I have an old copy of Sound Forge that will let you do tricks with sound that would dazzle a recording studio engineer 20 years ago. You guys might want to look at "Total Recorder" from www.totalrecorder.com Total Recorder sits between whatever is playing and your soundcard, like a proxy server. I can also simulate a soundcard to record in silence as fast as the server will send it, much faster than X1 speed play. Total Recorder will rip ANY audio from ANY source on the net, webpages, Realaudio, WMP, any secure player, any sound input (digital or audio). It's later versions have a neat intellegent recording function for those late night recordings! Total Recorder now turns individual songs DIRECTLY into MP3 separate files, complete with functions to strip off the 2 second deadtime, etc. It will automatically rip like this from any source, including very high speed conversions of your CD collection direct to whatever speed MP3 compression you select. All you do is change CDs. Works great with its own normalization, DC offset, a full compander to level some awful recordings or streams. It also has a clock so it can start recording that XM or internet stream and stop it as you select. The scheduler has lots of modes and options. TR is not free, but you get lifetime upgrades for a pittance.... To catalog/search/play/log your extensive MP3 collection, I recommend a Russian program "MP3 Catalog Pro" from www.wizetech.com, the blazingly fastest MP3 catalogger on the planet. It's not free either but is cheap. It automatically creates a catalog of any and all MP3s on your system, reading the IDx tags off all MP3s it finds for instant searching through thousands of songs as fast as you can click. Drag the desired search results to another folder to burn or Winamp's playlist to play works great. Dragging to Nero burner also works flawlessly...in digital or CD mode. Just thought you'd like this information.....Sorry it won't switch XM channels from its scheduler...(c; Maybe in the future if there's a demand. Larry -- |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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That is what I am using to record from XM
I'll may start doing that as well. I use Media Center 2005 and record it that way. However, it gets recorded as a video. Then I strip the audio out of the video as an MP3. Looks like Total Recorder will eliminate the second step. --Mike wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 02:11:00 +0000, Larry wrote: You guys might want to look at "Total Recorder" from www.totalrecorder.com That is what I am using to record from XM |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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wrote in news:qbqje3dq2kfigfl5kc9lgvhuledtd3p2iv@
4ax.com: It is where I get some of the old stuff they play on "Bluesville" that you really can't find at Wal-Mart. alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.blues How big are your hard drives??....(c; You don't have to download them in SLOWtime...one at a time. Download Grabit from www.shemes.com and don't buy their service. Grabit is free and completely automates downloading usenet binaries....at full cap speed, 24/7. Man, they got great old Blues on usenet...or about anything else you'd like to listen to but can't find and XM DOESN'T PLAY. Larry -- alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.(your favorite genre) |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 01:58:03 +0000, Larry wrote:
wrote in news:qbqje3dq2kfigfl5kc9lgvhuledtd3p2iv@ 4ax.com: It is where I get some of the old stuff they play on "Bluesville" that you really can't find at Wal-Mart. alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.blues How big are your hard drives??....(c; You don't have to download them in SLOWtime...one at a time. Download Grabit from www.shemes.com and don't buy their service. Grabit is free and completely automates downloading usenet binaries....at full cap speed, 24/7. Man, they got great old Blues on usenet...or about anything else you'd like to listen to but can't find and XM DOESN'T PLAY. Larry Agent will download pretty fast. Does grabit somehow do it faster? |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote in
: Agent will download pretty fast. Does grabit somehow do it faster? Yes! Grabit is MADE for downloading, not texting. Once you get the header updates Grabit neatly sorts and compiles multimessage binaries into one line, you can click and drag marking a whole bunch of binaries at once on the header list.....say all the .rar pieces for an entire movie on alt.binaries.movies.divx. Then, you simply press the GRABIT button at the top to add all those marked files to the download batch. Grabit immediately starts working on the batch as you mark and GRABIT more files. With any files in the batch, which shows as another tab from the header list, Grabit uses three simultaneous ports, not one, connected to the server. This completely maxes out your bandwidth cap and, because downloading on the other two ports continues, unabated, while the port that just finished one message waits for the next to start, there are no gaps in download bandwidth. Throughput downloading from 3 simultaneous ports is much higher than from a single port, alone, as there are no pauses. When a string of pieces has been stored in a temp folder, then Grabit does the multimessage decoding and storage to your desired output folder for further processing (like running Winrar to retrieve the Divx movie in playable format.) All this is much more efficient. The batch is independent of the header tab. When you've completed marking and GRABITing this newsgroup for today to the batch, you may delete the unused, unwanted leftovers on the list...which only marks them as deleted so you can start fresh next time you UPDATE the newsgroup...but does NOT delete them from Grabit's storage so you can click open the deleted files to retrieve yesterday's parts that completed today, or recovering from mistakes we all make. Having completed maintenance on this newsgroup, you simply open another one to go to a new newsgroup for more marking and GRABITing...which goes on the END of the batch no matter how many newsgroups you mark/grabit. You may, however, RIGHTclick on a file you want to download at the TOP of the batch, next, and pick "Download First" and Grabit will put that piece, say a .nfo file, the info on the movie, at the top of the que so it downloads next for viewing. The process may go on, indefinately. Grabit does a wonderful job of purging its header cache from your desired storage time, unattended. It never crashes, here, or crashes WindozeXP. My batches sometimes have 100GB qued up. Of course, one must have STORAGE to put the 100GB....or keep processing what it has got several times to recover the storage drive so it doesn't get a disk full error. If it does get a disk full error, it simply stops, pops up a window of warning and sits there, quite content to wait until you do something to correct it. Another thing I love about Grabit is its ability to store EXACTLY where it was downloading in the batch...whenever you need to PAUSE or UNBOOT Grabit to do something else. You don't need to wait until it is complete to shut down Grabit! If you just dump Grabit before the batch is complete, it asks you if you want to store the batch to disk so it can pick up where it left off at a later time. You click YES and Grabit stores the batch to its hard drive. When you boot Grabit next time, a window pops up asking you if you want to continue the batch where it left off. You answer YES, Grabit reconnects to the server and starts downloading from the last BIT it stored when you shut it down...without losing a single bit. If you answer NO, grabit clears the batch for a new batch. So, you can stop downloading, have your computer back to use, then start the downloading, once again, after you're done using the computer and are going out or to bed. Just let Grabit run during downtimes.....a real feature here. I can't believe they give such great, bugfree software away! http://www.shemes.com/ Larry -- Search youtube for "Depleted Uranium" The ultimate dirty bomb...... |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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wrote in news:r0qje3l6bgesnvtqtmioa5li0av0d97b7f@
4ax.com: My Sansa works like that. I am running straight W/98 and this shows up as a USP portable drive when I plug it in. Anything I load out there plays. Sansa used to be a no-nonsense ramplug drive, but has knuckled under of late. My Sansa Express 2GB will PLAY any file WinExplorer loads to it, directly, but the 2GB memory no longer operates in memory mode, only music mode so you can't offload it...which I don't like but it's not my favorite player. I only use it riding motorcycle. They don't make my player any mo http://tinyurl.com/24dhse Mine came with 100GB drive, but, because it's a STANDARD laptop hard drive, I've swapped it out to a 120GB I got for free from a trashed laptop whos battery exploded. The Digital Mind Xclef HD-500 is huge by Ipod standards. It uses a STANDARD Li-Ion battery you can buy from any place that supplies cellphone batteries and the STANDARD laptop hard drive, which is VERY rugged, indeed. The included nice leather case protects it from the scratches and bumps. Mine is old, now, but still playing great! It came from an obscure Korean military contractor: http://www.mclsys.com/index.html where I can still get firmware upgrades, easily installed over its STANDARD USB connector....just copy the firmware file to the hard drive where the bootloader looks for it...just like any computer. No rom burning necessary to crash. The Xclef IS a portable 120GB hard drive and will store, use, transport, copy, delete any kind of file...even from DOS it works....no funny business. Larry -- Did I mention it's HUGE?!...(C; |
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