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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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The Quad 6000 review kind of shows B&O the way of the future. They managed back then: "ANY readers who have noticed the price in the heading of this review—and who are nevertheless prepared to read on—will have realised that the Beosystern 6000 is a very ex pensive audio system indeed. It may be asked why we devote space to such
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[quote user="cooldude"] I used to have an apple tv which I ended up selling rather quickly as I found it fairly slow in use, needs my computer to be always on, unstable wireless connection and an image quality (even the HD rentals) is barely at par (even connected with hdmi) with a regular SD image upgraded through the Samsung Blu-ray player's
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I think I like it best when forum members don't tell other members to shut up.
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What do you have against swahili? Maybe worth checking the settings for the projection connection. A cinematographer I know, and who is very critical of image quality, connected the best of the InFocus projectors to his AppleTV, via HMDI, and decided not to build a Blu-ray library. Sound is vastly superior on BD - IF the movie company has taken the
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If analysts spoke the way they "sound" in google-translation, then we wouldn't take them seriously, and that might be a good thing.
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Here's my suggestion. (All they need, is some way of protecting their ideas against management meddling, I guess!)
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Level of volume out is not an issue with QuickTime 7 and 8, and I'm guessing you have QuickTime 8 - so no need to worry about that. I'm guessing that the increased volume raises the V RMS output through the analog connection to a level that the speakers can't handle. On my BL5s this should be less than or equal to 2 V RMS. As a general rule
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One could also argue that switching on-and-off a component will heat and cool it every day, ensuring greater wear from expansion and contraction, rather than having it at the same temperature. What's important is that it's placed somewhere it doesn't overheat, not in a closed, small box, for instance. My Mac mini has been on for two years
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Try Dillen in here - he's got a lot of parts for classic equipment. The person at B&O Beocare wouldn't know where to begin ... Just search for Dillen here on the forum. He's got several posts in the Vintage section.
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Crackling from USB ports to DACs, and not just Cambridge's, is due to the USB ports on the Macs. Since you're using USB for both your connections, David, you're bound to have one "lousy" port. It's thought to be a result of interference from keyboard USB interface. Usually disappears if you switch the USB connector to the other
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