Alsodoes restarting have any impact on this behavior, even if only temporarily? Restart your iPhone NOT REALLY. IT ONLY AFFECTS THE ISSUE AS RESTARTING THE PHONE DISCONNECTS THE BLUETOOTH HEARING AIDS. AS SOON AS THE AIDS RECONNECT THE ISSUE IS SAME AS ABOVE
I have been having this issue since I updated my Apple iPhone 12 Mini to iOS 15.4. I even waited until the update was readily available to install instead of using the public beta to try to avoid as many bugs as possible. It does appear to be a bug in the update as simple troubleshooting suggestions have fixed it twice now for me. I have spoke to someone about it and am having it reported to hopefully get this bug fixed through Apple itself.
I spoke too soon. While the player did not show up yesterday after I installed 15.1 the player is now appearing today on the locked screen immediately after the bluetooth hearing aids connect to my phone. It is being triggered by a Bluetooth connection with a device like hearing aids or headphones because as an experiment I disconnected my hearing aids and connected my Bluetooth headphones (which I do not use with my phone as I use hearing aids)and that caused the music player to show up on the locked screen too.
I just updated to 15.1 today and the music on Lock Screen started immediately. My music app is not open and I go in and close it and it still shows on Lock Screen. I have tried to restart. Turning off Bluetooth etc. this is super annoying since I cannot figure out how to clear this from my Lock Screen at all.
I am having the same issue ever since I updated to 15.1. The Apple play covers all of my notifications as it takes up the entire home screen so I cannot see them unless I scroll up and I used to be able to see them right there on the home screen without having to do that very annoying. Please fix this ASAP!!!
The back of the device has jacks to accept external switches. Five switches can be added to provide the function of each button switch. External switches operate whether the player is using AC or DC. The SLK Power Select occurs when the main power switch on the back of the player is set in the SLK mode position. In this mode, and when using a sip and puff switch, the user can play and pause the audio, however they will be unable to control song choice or volume.
When selecting a group of music files to place on a cartridge, do not select a file that is not a WAV or MP3 file. If this happens, connect the cartridge back to your computer and remove the alien file.
Do not remove the rechargeable batteries that come in the device. Alkaline batteries will work, but they are not rechargeable. If you received the Joy Player from an outside source, check to see if the correct batteries are in the device. The device ships with batteries that are white with the APH logo on them. Batteries are not replaceable.
I was reading a book which says that a processor with single core and no hyper-threading can process only one process at a time, so a doubt arises that when we do so many operations on a PC and also some background processes are always there then why not music player stops in between for short while. I know the CPU is pretty fast but still music player usually plays music in continuance without any small break ( that is observable ). Can anyone clarify this behavior?
1) A single-core CPU without hyperthreading can, as you say, only run one process at a time. Multiple processes are handled by context-switching, that is the CPU will run one process and then switch to the next process and the next and then back to the first process and so on. The frequency of how often a certain process is scheduled is dependent on lots of different factors, where process priority is one. (Back in the days it was often needed to run WinAmp with elevated priority to avoid glitches etc. Nowadays this is not needed as the CPU is a lot faster).
When processing audio the CPU feeds the sound device with samples by putting them either in a hardware buffer on the sound card or in the RAM. The sound processor does not get its data directly from the CPU, instead it reads the samples from one of these two buffers. As long as we have samples in the buffer we are good, even though the CPU is off doing something else.
Running out of samples is called buffer underrun. Even on modern computers this can happen, for example if you start a heavy process while running your audio player the CPU may not be able to switch back in time and we can clearly hear glitches and gaps in the sound feed.
This is due to an operating system which does preemptive multi-tasking. The process is in fact being interrupted for a very short amount of time, not long enough to notice for a human. Another reason is also that the audio card has a playback buffer which allows the playback continously, while data is being fed to it in chunks. So while the process of feeding the card with data is being interrupted for a very short time, the playback can still occur.
The scheduler will allocate a time slice to each process (this maybe a few milliseconds) and will allow a process to execute what it needs to for that length of time. The length allocated is determined by the algorithm used by the OS (I.e. Short term scheduling, long term etc). The reason why you do not notice this is because the CPU can operate at such high frquencies, i.e. 1GHz which makes multi tasking on a single core / thread transparent to the user.
@maxmp the only reason i am not buying Poweramp Equalizer is i have to keep 2 different apps and Equalizer is universal so if i accidentally turn both on both might process audio on their end , i dont know if it will now ... But it happen last time i was on trial of P.Equalizer , isn't thier any way you can combine both Poweramp & Equalizer, instead of keeping 2 different apps , ... I know those 2 are 2 different sources of money for you , but if you make 1 app the exciting user of Poweramp can pay for Equalizer and get combine app same for exciting Equalizer user.
It you plan to use the Equalizer app universally on your device, I would suggest turning the EQ panel off within the main Poweramp app so you only have one set of controls to worry about. Also, you should only use DVC in one app or the other. You can import your current PA settings over into the Equalizer if you wish.
But they are separate products, and there is no need to purchase the Poweramp Music Player if you prefer to use a different media player app and only want the Equalization feature. Conversely, if you only plan to listen to your music via the Poweramp Music Player, I would suggest using its built-in Equalizer.
If or when I use the Poweramp player (with its built-in EQ) that I do almost daily should I then disable the "stand-alone" PA Equalizer by pressing the Equ-button, as pointed to in the image?? And only use this Equalizer when I'm listening to let's say Spotify or YouTube Music?
You can just untick Poweramp from the Known Players list in the Poweramp-Equalizer app settings, or disable MusicFX in the Poweramp Music Player app. Both will prevent two lots of equalization occurring.
I've used the player for a couple of years but I'm new to the EQ app (for now only trying it out in the trial version), so that's what makes me quite insecure. The player is amazing and now I want the same or similar exquisite audio in, for example, Spotify and/or YT Music but not interfering with the Poweramp Player.
The EQ app won't process the audio of any other app that is not ticked in its. Known Players list. Also, the PA Music Player app won't advertise it's audio stream as being available for modification without the MusicFX mode activated.
Playing music to people with dementia from their formative years vastly improves their cognizance and lucidity - the effects are dramatic, and are widely recognized by dementia and Alzheimer professionals.
Their construction is highly durable consisting of a strong wooden enclosure with a high strength plastic covering. The loudspeaker grille is cloth finished but reinforced with a steel mesh to avoid any damage to the speaker. Rubber feet ensure that the player does not slip. It can be wiped down with a damp cloth if required.
**great for a dance or two!!
NAME THAT TUNE; what a great activity to play. Download up to 1,000 songs. Open the lid to the music player and play the first few lines, then close it and let them guess. If they can't get the answer then open the lid and play more. When they get it right you can play the whole song or just press the button and go on to the next.
A. The internal memory is set at 4GB. Obviously the length of individual songs has an influence on the capacity. To some extent this is an academic question since most people with dementia are more than happy with a much smaller song list of say 25 to 40 tunes.
A. Yes, Simple Music Players bought since June 2015 have an Apple compatible USB interface. (Please note that it is not an Apple device so it cannot play 'Apple protected' .m4p downloads).
Q. I've reformatted the player, transferred the disk and now nothing plays?
A. If you reformat the player, you must choose an MSDOS-FAT format option, NOT an Apple IOS format.
A. We have to use a special technique and a more expensive production process to achieve this attractive finish. The casing is vacuum formed not injection molded for the-walnut version.
Q. Do you know if/how to change the order of the songs the player plays? Does it always go back to the first song? Any way it can "shuffle?"
A.We purposely don't have a shuffle function due to our front end research. The intent of the music player is to leave it permanently plugged in so that it plays in a complete loop (and doesn't require the additional operation of plugging the power in to make it work, for the person with dementia). Generally we have found that most people with dementia only require between 25 and 40 tunes and the familiarity of the cycle is more positive than a random choice. When it is stopped by lowering the lid, it will restart from that position (i.e. not from the beginning)
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