The series is executive produced by Spielberg, Hanks and Goetzman, and features a stellar cast led by Academy Award nominee Austin Butler, Callum Turner, Anthony Boyle, Nate Mann, Rafferty Law, Academy Award nominee Barry Keoghan, Josiah Cross, Branden Cook and Ncuti Gatwa.
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This study evaluated the efficacy of using sequential forced air ozone followed by an advanced oxidative process (AOP) treatment to inactivate Listeria monocytogenes on and within Empire apples. The forced air ozone treatment consisted of a reactor that introduced ozone (6 g/h) into an airstream that flowed through an apple bed (ca. 30 cm in depth). Before treatment, the apples were conditioned at 4C to ensure that condensate had formed before the apples were transferred to the reactor. The condensate ensured sufficient relative humidity to enhance the antimicrobial action of ozone. Air was passed through the apple bed at 9.3 m/s, and the ozone was introduced after 10 min. The ozone concentration measured after exiting the apple bed reached a steady state of 23 ppm. A 20-min ozone treatment supported a 2.12- to 3.07-log CFU reduction of L. monocytogenes, with no significant effect of apple position within the bed. The AOP-based method was a continuous process whereby hydrogen peroxide was introduced as a vapor into a reactor illuminated by UV-C and ozone-emitting lamps that collectively generated hydroxyl radicals. Operating the AOP reactor with UV-C light (54-mJ cm2 dose), 6% (v/v) hydrogen peroxide, 2 g/h ozone, and a chamber temperature of 48C resulted in a 3-log CFU reduction of L. monocytogenes on the surface of the apples and internally within the scar tissue. Applying a caramel coating, from a molten solution (at 80C), resulted in a 0.5-log CFU reduction of L. monocytogenes on the apple surface. In apples treated with the sequential process, L. monocytogenes could only be recovered sporadically by enrichment and did not undergo outgrowth when the caramel apples were stored at 22C for 19 days. However, growth of L. monocytogenes within the core, but not the surface, was observed from caramel apples prepared from nontreated control fruit.
After lots of experiments with VLAN configurations and WLAN settings, we keep on struggling with the quality of audio/video streaming and Airplay mirroring from iPads and MacBooks to Apple TV's (drop outs, hickups, audio stuttering, connection drops and Apple TV disappears from list of devices, ...). So we have a couple of questions: if you could design a large campus network from scratch, what would be the ideal setup (VLAN's, WLAN's, ...) in order to have reliable WiFi, audio/video streaming and Airplay mirroring?
Things to consider:
- VLAN Apple TV's: apart from the wireless clients? Together with the wireless clients? Segmented into several smaller VLAN's in order to limit the number of Apple TV's per VLAN?
- VLAN wireless clients: apart from the Apple TV's, or together? Segmented into smaller VLAN's, per building/zone?
- What with Bonjour, mDNS, multicast and the cross-VLAN discovery of Apple TV's? How to publish the Apple TV's to another VLAN? How to limit the discovery, so that the clients don't get a list of 100 Apple TV's to choose from?
- WLAN recommendations: 2.4 and/or 5GHz? Channelization limits? Power? Band balancing? Advanced settings?
The situation got much better, but still, sometimes on certain locations we have a problem with certain types of streaming video. Sometimes we can solve this by factory resetting the Apple TV, but not always. It's still not clear what causes these problems.
Interesting. I've been steadily plugging away on similar issues for the last year and a half and here are some insights of my own:
Firstly, for anyone browsing and reading this without a lot of background info, airplay has a split in it's functionality. There is airplay mirroring and airstream. Most of the documentation I have found regarding to this is either old, vague or reverse engineered so based on observation these are the characteristics.
Attempting to connect to an apple TV multiple times in a given window can cause a state where the connection requests 'stack' and leave it visible but unresponsive to further connection attempts until rebooted.
I've been experiencing trouble with detection on certain devices in certain locations and hadn't considered that it could be a VLAN issue, which in hindsight does explain a lot of the troubles I haven't been able to resolve.
Thank you for the information, I hope the observations I've written here are helpful to someone else.
Since they are based mostly on firsthand experience and inference, if someone with access to good documentation does pass by, please give it to me so I can see if I'm wrong!
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The mac app won't show any airplay devices other than my phone or the web browser. My iphone Spotify app can see and send audio to any airplay device but my mac won't even show them. I think this was working fine when i was using an intel Macbook pro, but I'm not 100% sure if switching to M1 is what triggered this.
On iOS and MacOS, it's not possible to select Airplay devices directly from the Spotify Connect picker, but there should be a button there that will open up a native OS UI which should allow you to select your Airplay device.
If you still experience this, it might be caused by an issue with your device's cache. Not to worry, performing a clean reinstall of the app with the steps here should help solve this. It'll get you the latest version of Spotify with all necessary updates and fixes and will remove any corrupted files from previous installations.
On another note, this behavior could also be caused by VPN or private tunnel, since those re-route network traffic. We'd recommend to turn off VPN if you're using one and test if you'll experience the same.
@oli206, in this case, we'd like to gather some additional info. Just to confirm, is AirPlay working as it should with other apps? Is this just happening with Spotify, or does it happen on other apps?
Hey @hodgiers,
Welcome to the Community and thank you for joining the conversation.
Just to be on the same page, could you confirm if you've followed the processes previously mentioned in the thread?
Also, would you mind checking if the Web Player has the same behavior or if it works fine? This will give us a better look at the issue.
We'll be on the lookout.
On another note, would you mind letting us know what troubleshooting steps you've tried so far? If you haven't yet, we'd recommend reinstalling the app on your computer to see if you notice any difference. By doing that, the app can be up-to-date, and you can make sure the cache is not leading to this inconvenience. You check the steps to do it here.
Can you let us know if you can see your Airplay device when using the webplayer? This will help us figure out if the issue is isolated to the Desktop app itself or to some network connectivity settings.
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