Re: The Hey Bro Dual Audio Hindi

0 views
Skip to first unread message
Message has been deleted

Latrisha Adan

unread,
Jul 13, 2024, 3:23:33 PM7/13/24
to lmagporpanggolf

Before you try the recommendations below, be sure to check if your device's software and related apps are updated to the latest version. Please check the following steps for how to update your mobile device's software.

The Hey Bro Dual Audio Hindi


Download Zip https://tlniurl.com/2yLQH2



Dual audio allows you to send your media audio to two different Bluetooth devices at once. This means that not only can you use two pairs of headphones at one time, but you can share between two different sets of Bluetooth speakers as well. After you pair both Bluetooth devices to your Samsung Galaxy phone, you just need to access your Media panel on your Quick panel.

Dual Audio allows you to send your media audio to two different Bluetooth devices at once. This means that not only can you use two pairs of headphones at one time but you can share between two different sets of Bluetooth speakers as well. After you pair both Bluetooth devices to your Samsung Galaxy phone, you just need to access your Media Panel on your Quick Settings. Follow the below guide for more information.

Please Note: This guide is designed for Australian variant Galaxy devices, if you have an international device and require further support click here to get in touch with your Samsung subsidiary.

I have noticed that for some reason, you can not play audio on two bluetooth speakers that are not apple-branded. On android, you have an option to play music on two devices called Dual Audio and can play music on multiple devices. Will Apple ever develop something like Dual Audio or will we be allowed to use airplay to play music on two non-apple branded bluetooth devices simultaneously. I know many are also looking for something like this so please work on something like Dual Audio.

@Tablets6lite: I had a look into this, and Dual Audio may be available on the Tab S6 Lite, as it features Bluetooth 5.0. To check, head to Settings > Connections > Bluetooth > Tap the 3 dots in the top right > Advanced > Dual Audio. If it's not there, you may wish to check out Settings > Sounds and Vibration > Separate App Sound. This isn't quite the same, but does allow you to play sound from a selected app on a different audio device.

Samsung Galaxy S6 Lite with Android 10 does not have Dual Audio. I have the device and the options just are not there. Yet another let down with this tablet and with Android. Bought it as a mediapad for my girls for car trips and such yet due to Samsung they're forced to get tangled with wires with their wireless headphones (luckily I chose headphones with both BT and cable connection). I bet the option is there only on more expensive models - Samsung ain't gettin' any more of my currencies.

@Rick900: The Dual Audio feature is limited to certain devices with Bluetooth 5.0, which the A7 (2018) has, however when I looked into this I was unable to find any support for the A series unfortunately. If you head to Settings > Connections > Bluetooth and tap the 3 dots in the top right, is Dual Audio available for selection? If not then it is unavailable on this model, and sadly it is not possible to upgrade the device to support the feature.

Thanks for the info, I've since discovered that Android 10 is required for Dual Audio (a pretty good feature!) and my phone was 8.0.0. I phoned Samsung, got thru to someone really quickly who advised manually upgrading s/w which I did 3 times to get to Android 10, and bingo there it is!

But maybe I spoke too soon - on my new A7 (2018) I have Android 10 and the Media feature is now there; I can see the 2 devices I've selected for audio but only 1 at a time can be connected, it's not possible to select both - any ideas? The Media screen is the same as on my other A7 (newer model but same s/w version), but both can be selected (ticked)...

Plus, dreams:
What stops coders from creating an audio middleware that could be playing audio over five devices?
That could mean, not even buying any new speakers anymore, but instead connecting all my old speakers simultaneously.

Im wearing hearing aids, which I connect via BT to my FP3. The HAs put the sound in my ears like any audio plug, too and at the same time the HAs are using their own microfone to record my speach.
But here is actually the problem:
If I connect the HAs to the FP3, this is the only connection. There is no way to use the HAs only for hearing and at the same time to connect another microfone for speaking.

This is ok in a very quiet environment but as soon you are on the street, at work or in a bar nobody can understand you anymore since the microfones of the HAs are always focussed in front of you (of course, since they are made to record sounds like that).

This is actually bothering me for years now. I dont have that problem on my computer since its very easy to decide myself in the (Windows) audio settings which hardware I want to use for sound in and which for sound out.

So my question is: Is it possible to set up more audio controllers? For example: My audio player outputs sound to one audio jack (my sound system), and for example web browser or game outputs sound do my headphones ? Is there any driver or soft that allows this. OS:XP , but I can change if some other OS supports it.

Yes. I believe Realtek allows you to separate the front audio and rear audio jacks in their control panel into two visible devices. From there, you simply have to tell Windows which device to send the audio to. Most audio-specific things (games, teamspeak, skype, ventrillo, mumble, etc.) allow you to specify the output device; set your speakers as the system default, and then set applications you want to use your headphones with to use the front audio, and plug your headphones in there.

I have a ton of content that has two+ audio tracks in different languages. I use the Roku app as my playback interface while my server is a Win 10 Pro PC. Is there a way to set all playback to a specific default language, or do I have to do it with every single file, manually?

Yes that's exactly what it means. You can try unchecking that option and see if that gives you a better result. In theory it should always choose the ENG track if that is your "preferred audio language"

In an MKV file (not sure about MP4) the streams have a flag which can mark them as default. In this case is is quite possible for the second stream to be the one marked default. As I understand it, Emby will use that flag if told to play the default track.

Well, I had two different MKVs that had JPN as audio #1, but I want the ENG, which is #2. Emby was defaulting to JPN and I was having to set audio on each episode separately, hence the source of my question.

You can use MKVToolNix to reorder the tracks as well, if you prefer. But for dealing with whole seasons and series of files, I use jMKVPropEdit for bulk editing of the flags without remuxing the files.

MKV files can contain disc titles; that is not the same as being like them. To be more precise, there are programs which can copy the contents of a disc track and save it as a file. This may be in one of many video file formats (e.g. wmv, avi, mp4, mkv, ogm) of which MKV is the most flexible, and the commonest these days. In an MKV file the first audio track is the default only if no other track is marked default; if you want another track to be default, you can specify that.

Between my last message here and this one, I have just marked a whole series to make the second audio track default, using the program I linked before. I've loaded it into Emby, and the second audio track is Emby's default selection.

The series I spoke of was Chikyū Shōjo Arujuna (Earth Girl/Maiden Arjuna), a 2001 show about a world destroyed by pollution, and a girl who has just died in an accident being given the power to save it with the promise that if she succeeds she will not die. My copy has the English track first, but I prefer to use the Japanese these days - hence my changing the default.

To do this, you and the other person need a few things: compatible Apple or Beats series headphones and an iPhone or iPad. After that, follow these steps for devices running iOS 15.1 and iPadOS 15.1 or later:

Yes, the Samsung Dual audio Bluetooth feature has been a mainstay of Samsung products since the launch of the Samsung Galaxy S8 series. Up-to-date devices like the Samsung Galaxy S24, Galaxy Tab S9, and Galaxy Z Flip 4 all support Samsung Dual Audio.

Bluetooth multipoint and Dual Audio facilitate inverse functionalities: the Bluetooth multipoint lets a single pair of wireless earbuds connect to two or more source devices at a time (e.g., smartphone and laptop), while the latter allows a single source device to send audio to two receiving headsets simultaneously.

7fc3f7cf58
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages