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Showing 1 of 17 conversations about:
Lefibonacci
629
Feb 10, 2018
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What is that MP3 player in the pic ?
Feb 10, 2018
JeremiePlam
2
Mar 5, 2018
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Mar 5, 2018
Lefibonacci
629
Mar 6, 2018
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JeremiePlamwhereas an "MP3" is a type of music format, this supports other higher quality types?
Mar 6, 2018
JeremiePlam
2
Mar 6, 2018
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LefibonacciYup, like FLAC! Here is a list with the compatible formats :
Lossless : - DSD: DSD64, DSD128 (.iso&.dsf & .dff); - APE(Fast): 192 kHz/24 bit; - APE(Normal): 96 kHz/24 bit; - APE (High): 96 kHz/24 bit; AIFF:192 kHz/24 bit; - FLAC: 192 kHz/24 bit; - WAV: 192 kHz/64 bit; - WMA Lossless: 96 kHz/24 bit; - Apple Lossless: 192 kHz/24 bit;
Lossy : - MP3 - WMA - OGG and so on...
Mar 6, 2018
Lefibonacci
629
Mar 6, 2018
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JeremiePlamThanks for the lesson. I'm thinking of getting something with a higher quality format but is there truly a noticeable difference? I mean, I would assume so being that people are spending the money.
Mar 6, 2018
JeremiePlam
2
Mar 6, 2018
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LefibonacciI'm not an expert, but yes there is a small difference. Lossless music will be clearer, more crisp and detailed but if you're not a audiofile, you won't really tell the difference that much. But of course, not only the supported formats is important. An audio player, compared to a phone, is dedicated to music so the components inside will provide a better sound quality and less distortion. Some of them has a normal 3.5 audio jack with an aditionnal balanced port and/or a line/coax out. Some also provide the option to be used as USB Dac for your computer for example, which would output better audio than what your computers's sound card would offer.
Mar 6, 2018
Elzizo
520
Mar 16, 2018
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LefibonacciFiio X3 Gen 2. I own one. Great little player
Mar 16, 2018
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