Rahkmalla
Well-Known Member
As someone turning 40 soon... how did they get through school?I have friends who aren't even 40 who don't have / don't know how to use home computers / laptops, so good luck getting those CD's to MP3's![]()
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As someone turning 40 soon... how did they get through school?I have friends who aren't even 40 who don't have / don't know how to use home computers / laptops, so good luck getting those CD's to MP3's![]()
Not graduate?As someone turning 40 soon... how did they get through school?
Yes, connect to the dash USB port. The CD player must be able to plug directly into the USB; not via an adapter.
Key Details for Using USB CD Players:
Reference: Video
- Compatibility: The car must have a USB port that supports data (not just charging).
- Functionality: The car stereo treats the external player like a USB flash drive, allowing you to play, skip, and pause tracks.
- Limitations: Some units might not support all audio formats; WAV, MP3, or WMA are generally required.
- Alternatives: You can also rip your CDs to a USB drive (as MP3/WMA files) and play them directly.
Our typing class was 1 semester of typing and 1 of programming type stuff. Like how to make pictures with software. Make a house with a tree and that kinda thing. My tree ended up upside down. I let the kids do most of the computer stuff now.Not graduate?
When I was in high school we had typing classes. That was the extent of our computer work unless you went to a class more focused on computers or technology.
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FLAC still takes up too much space for practical reasons compared to even mp3 320kbps cbr. Dark Side of the moon was nearing 4gb FLAC while only 1.2gb mp3 (roughly, been 10+ years since I ripped/uploaded them) just for reference. I'm still having issues with storage on devices with 512tb or less due to the carplay/etc not playing nice with the sheer quantity of songs. This was an issue years back with external drives/adapters, some had little cache and win7 didn't play nicely with large drives in modern formats. Heck my 4gb iPod nano would glitch on occasion with the oem pioneer radios using the 30pin connector after updates when fully loaded and scanning with the radio for a song.Most services suck compared to 1.44Mbps Redbook audio ( Compact Disc ). Preferring the vastly superior audio fidelity of CD doesn't make you old. There's also something better about listening to a CD instead of having the attention span of a ferret on a double cappuccino skipping through tracks on a streaming service.
Spotify is garbage. Youtube Music is garbage. Amazon Music has lossless audio ( CD rates ).
People who are satisfied with most streaming services as well as mp3 are deaf in my opinion. If you're going to rip, use FLAC. Mp3 served a purpose when we had dial-up modems and limited storage space. It's absolutely moronic to use it now I don't understand why somebody wants shitty quality.
See the 1955 in the username…
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Well to be fair, my hearing is at the point where I go HUH? to people a lotMost services suck compared to 1.44Mbps Redbook audio ( Compact Disc ). Preferring the vastly superior audio fidelity of CD doesn't make you old. There's also something better about listening to a CD instead of having the attention span of a ferret on a double cappuccino skipping through tracks on a streaming service.
Spotify is garbage. Youtube Music is garbage. Amazon Music has lossless audio ( CD rates ).
People who are satisfied with most streaming services as well as mp3 are deaf in my opinion. If you're going to rip, use FLAC. Mp3 served a purpose when we had dial-up modems and limited storage space. It's absolutely moronic to use it now I don't understand why somebody wants shitty quality.
All we did was learn how to type 'correctly'.Our typing class was 1 semester of typing and 1 of programming type stuff. Like how to make pictures with software. Make a house with a tree and that kinda thing. My tree ended up upside down. I let the kids do most of the computer stuff now.
Glad to see someone else out there is still tied to mp3s (I still buy CDs and rip them); I currently use Apple Music since iTunes is pretty much gone - I've thought about going the USB route, but don't think there's any way to manage playlists (unless I'm not thinking of something).Not sure how serious this thread is - but if you are an mp3 fanatic like I am (yes - I still use Itunes and download mp3s) I would highly suggest using a 256GB SanDisk Ultra Fit USB, formatted to fat32, and load your entire music library onto it and enjoy a seamless integrated music library on your uconnect Jeep entertainment console.
https://www.jeepgladiatorforum.com/forum/threads/sd-card-music.93499/post-1505421
Spotify offers everything from low 24kbps to very high 320kbps to lossless and let's you pick a different rate for cellular data vs wifi vs downloads. Music I really like I'll download lossless. Streaming cellular I usually go 160kpbs. Wifi doesn't get used in the Jeep so it doesn't matter (also lossless). It's not like the jeep has a great soundstage or audiophile quality sound or acoustics though. Having access to nearly any song on a whim, podcasts, ebooks, etc is more than enough for me.Most services suck compared to 1.44Mbps Redbook audio ( Compact Disc ). Preferring the vastly superior audio fidelity of CD doesn't make you old. There's also something better about listening to a CD instead of having the attention span of a ferret on a double cappuccino skipping through tracks on a streaming service.
Spotify is garbage. Youtube Music is garbage. Amazon Music has lossless audio ( CD rates ).
People who are satisfied with most streaming services as well as mp3 are deaf in my opinion. If you're going to rip, use FLAC. Mp3 served a purpose when we had dial-up modems and limited storage space. It's absolutely moronic to use it now I don't understand why somebody wants shitty quality.