HACK Advanced Karaoke Player V3.1

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Jul 9, 2024, 1:22:29 PM7/9/24
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Unleash Your Karaoke Passion with the 15.6" V3 Max 4-in-1 Touch Screen Karaoke Machine!Ignite your inner performer with our advanced karaoke system. The V3 Max features a vibrant 15.6" touchscreen and comes bundled with two wireless microphones, ensuring a captivating and immersive karaoke experience.This 4-in-1 machine combines all the essential components you need to create a professional karaoke setup right at home. Please note that an amplifier is required to complete the karaoke machine.Navigate through your extensive song library effortlessly using the intuitive touchscreen interface, allowing you to easily browse or search for your favorite tracks. Sing directly on the machine or connect it to your TV using the HDMI output for an enhanced audiovisual experience.Choose from over 400,000 songs in various languages, including English, Korean, Mandarin, Cantonese, and Japanese. Keep your karaoke collection up to date with hassle-free song updates from the cloud, ensuring your personal library remains fresh and exciting.Take control of your sound with the ability to adjust the equalizer, echo, and reverb settings within the same machine, allowing you to fine-tune your vocals to perfection.Immerse yourself in the performance as captivating music videos play in the background, adding a dynamic visual element to your singing sessions.Expand your musical horizons with the included YouTube app, enabling you to easily search for additional songs and videos to broaden your repertoire. Additionally, enjoy access to a variety of Chinese TV channels through the integrated Chinese TV app, offering additional entertainment options.Unlock the full potential of your karaoke passion with the 15.6" V3 Max 4-in-1 Touch Screen Karaoke Machine. Sing your heart out, entertain your friends and family, and create unforgettable memories with this exceptional karaoke setup. Please note that an amplifier is required to complete the system and maximize your audio experience.

Not only two wireless microphones included, you can also connect additional microphones with the 2 mic input jacks, allowing multiple performers to join in the fun simultaneously with JYX S55 Karaoke Machine.

HACK Advanced Karaoke Player v3.1


DOWNLOAD https://xiuty.com/2yMZi8



Built in antenna for radio enthusiast which can search and save available stations automatically, making you stay tuned anywhere you go. Get rid of the bondage of distance and control the speaker freely.

Pair 2 JYX Karaoke Machines for stereo surround sound. Enjoy stable and instant connections with the latest Bluetooth 5.0 chip and immerse yourself in studio-quality sound effects with TWS technology.

Q:How to connect TV?
A: There is an Aux-in cable come with the box. Ensure that your TV has a 3.5mm headphone jack or an RCA audio output (red and white ports).Plug one end of the AUX-in cable into the 3.5mm headphone jack on your TV or the RCA audio output if you're using an adapter. Then, plug the other end of the cable into the AUX-in port on your speaker.

Q:&nbspHow to record?
A:Insert USB or TF card, press "REC" to start recording, then press "REC" again to stop recording and play back. Please note that the recording function can only capture sounds recorded by the microphone, the music can't be recorded together.

Q: What kinds of battery is required for the mics and remote?
A: AA batteries for microphones and AAA batteries for remote.

Q: How to set up radio?
A: Pull out the FM antenna, press "MODE" button and switch to FM mode. Long press the "PLAY/PAUSE" button to search for channels.

Q:&nbspHow do you know when its fully charged?
A:The light next to the charging port will turn blue after it's fully charged.

Q:What is the TWS mode?
A: Connect two JYX karaoke machines with the same mode by the way mentioned above and you can enjoy advanced stereo sound just like a movie theater does.

Its musical content is an instrumental rendition of a well-known popular song. In recent times, lyrics are typically displayed on a video screen, along with a moving symbol, changing colour, or music video images, to guide the singer. In Chinese-speaking countries and regions such as mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore, a karaoke box is called a KTV. The global karaoke market has been estimated to be worth nearly $10 billion.[2]

From 1961 to 1966, the American TV network NBC carried a karaoke-like series, Sing Along with Mitch, featuring host Mitch Miller and a chorus, which superimposed the lyrics to their songs near the bottom of the TV screen for home audience participation.[3] The primary difference between karaoke and sing-along songs is the absence of the lead vocalist.

Sing-alongs (present since the beginning of singing) fundamentally changed with the introduction of new technology. In the late 1960s and into the 1970s, stored audible materials began to dominate the music recording industry and revolutionized the portability and ease of use of band and instrumental music by musicians and entertainers as the demand for entertainers increased globally. This may have been attributable to the introduction of music cassette tapes, technology that arose from the need to customize music recordings and the desire for a "handy" format that would allow fast and convenient duplication of music and thereby meet the requirements of the entertainers' lifestyles and the 'footloose' character of the entertainment industry.

The karaoke-styled machine was developed in various places in Japan. Even before the invention of the first machines, the word "karaoke" had long been used in Japan's entertainment industry to refer to the use of instrumental recordings as backing tracks in situations when a live band could not be arranged for a singer.[4] Japanese engineer Shigeichi Negishi, who ran a consumer electronics assembly business, made the first prototype in 1967;[5][6][7] He subsequently began mass producing coin-operated versions under the brand name "Sparko Box," making it the first commercially available karaoke machine. For media, it used 8-track cassette tapes of commercially available instrumental recordings. Lyrics were provided in a paper booklet.[8] However, he ran into distribution troubles and ceased production of the Sparko Box shortly thereafter.[9] Despite being credited as the first to automate and commercialize the karaoke singalong, Negishi, who died in 2024, never patented his invention.[10] Another early pioneer was Toshiharu Yamashita, who worked as a singing coach, and in 1970 sold an 8-track playback deck with microphone for sing-alongs.[7]

In 1971, nightclub musician Daisuke Inoue[11] independently invented his own karaoke machine in the city of Kobe.[12][13] His biggest contribution was understanding the difficulty amateurs had in singing pop songs, recording his own versions of popular songs in keys that made them easier for casual singers.

As such he also included a rudimentary reverb function to help mask singers' deficiencies. For these reasons, he is often considered to be the inventor of the modern business model for karaoke, even though he was not the first to create a machine and did not, like Negishi or Yamashita, file a patent.[14] Music has long been part of Japan's nightlife, and particularly so in the postwar era, when a variety of establishments such as cabarets and hostess clubs emerged to serve the needs of salarymen unwinding and entertaining clients. Music, whether performed for listening or singing along, played a key role.[15] Inoue, a bandleader, drummer, and Electone keyboardist, specialized in leading sing-alongs at nightclubs in Sannomiya, the entertainment district of the city of Kobe.

He grew so popular that he became overbooked, and began recording instrumentals for clients when he could not personally perform for them. Realizing the potential for the market, he commissioned a coin-operated machine that metered out several minutes of singing time. Like Negishi's, it was based on an 8-Track cassette deck, and Inoue called it the "8 Juke."[16] Inoue loaned the machines to establishments for free in exchange for a portion of the monthly earnings from the machines.[17] He placed the first 8 Jukes in Sannomiya's "snack bars," but they initially failed to take off. Inoue then hired hostesses to ostentatiously sing on them, which successfully sparked interest. This also caused a great deal of friction with Inoue's fellow musicians, who saw it as drawing customers away from them.

Nevertheless karaoke spread throughout Kobe, then, over the course of the Seventies, all of Japan as major manufacturers such as JVC began producing their own versions of the singing machine.[18] Karaoke was long performed mainly in bars and hostess clubs in front of other patrons, but in the Eighties, a new style with private rooms emerged, called karaoke boxes. This became the dominant form of karaoke performance in Japan. In 2004, Daisuke Inoue was awarded the tongue-in-cheek Ig Nobel Peace Prize for inventing karaoke, "thereby providing an entirely new way for people to learn to tolerate each other."[19]

The patent holder of the karaoke machine is Roberto del Rosario, who is from the Philippines. He developed the karaoke's sing-along system in 1975 and is recognized as the sole holder of a patent for a karaoke system in the world.[20]

Karaoke soon spread to the rest of Asia and other countries all over the world. In-home karaoke machines soon followed but lacked success in the American and Canadian markets. When creators became aware of this problem, karaoke machines were no longer being sold strictly for the purpose of karaoke but as home theater systems to enhance television watching to "movie theater like quality". Home theater systems took off, and karaoke went from being the main purpose of the stereo system to a side feature.

As more music became available for karaoke machines, more people within the industry saw karaoke as a profitable form of lounge and nightclub entertainment. It is not uncommon for some bars to have karaoke performances seven nights a week.[25] commonly with high-end sound equipment superior to the small, stand-alone consumer versions. Dance floors and lighting effects are also becoming common sights in karaoke bars. Lyrics are often displayed on multiple television screens around the bar.

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