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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012 READ ONLY FORUM
This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
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It's fun when one's iPhone "corrects" entries, Peter. I've begun to collect iPhonisms. I wonder which surface it is Axel offers. [quote user="Peter "] Axel offers a surface too and will replace snapped cantilevers. [/quote]
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I don't think this is an Apple/B&O discussion - or it shouldn't be. It's a question of whether today's most used formats for moving digital content to consumers can be easily accessed through B&O equipment or not. Apple are not alone in offering digital content through the internet. At some point B&O chose to not be in the
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This has brought a very considerable number of new customers to the B&W brand. Can't be wrong. I don't buy into Trip's thinking at all, reminds me of Facit thinking no-one would want calculators with LED-displays. Facit who? The people who made their reputation making high quality mechanical adding machines.
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How AirPlay is used to stream other content than music to peripherals.
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I enjoyed this thread - you may find it useful. http://www.audiokarma.org/forums/showthread.php?t=191250
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I'll add a little something to the above. B&O made playing records thoroughly enjoyable, an aesthetic pleasure and a functional joy. They provided customers with reel-to-reel playback, and made the best cassette decks available, pioneering technology that ended up in other high-end players. They were among the first to provide cd-players, and
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B&O have wonderful televisions and speakers, required peripherals for enjoying content - whether analog or digital. If they focus on ensuring that these are top-notch, and that they continue to be styled to be as outstanding as they have been for decades now, then that bit is sorted. Then B&O has to recognize that its forays into BeoMedia and
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Actually, Airplay allows you to stream audio, HD-content video, photos and other digital content to every A/V peripheral on your WiFi or Ethernet network, controlled from wherever you are that is connected to that network. It requires either ATV-units or Macs that are connected to the peripheral (television or speaker.)
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There are people collecting quadraphonic records who will literally walk on water to get hold of a good or repairable Beogram 6000 - and I doubt the repair is a killer. You'll have more knowledgeable people than me sounding off on that point, I should think. http://beocentral.com/beogram6000-1970s
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i've shown this photo before, but thought I'd contribute to this enjoyable thread. I'm still amazed at how well my BV8-26" goes together with my Beosystem 6500, with full remote control through the TV. I also have a BeoLab 2000 connected to the system - it is in the kitchen, and I can dial up the TV-sound from the BeoLab 2000, when
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