Category Archives: Apple

HiRes Audio on a Phone? Where MP3/AAC/FLAC are all so yesterday – details

For most of us we used to buy CD’s but now the trend is more towards downloading music, or even paying a monthly fee for all you can listen to streaming music service eg. Spotify, Apple, Google and others. They all offer a high music quality streaming option, but generally the maximum bitrate is 320mp3. Tidal HiFi is an exception, as this allows for FLAC HiFi quality music files. FLAC files are above CD quality and sound great. But the catch 22 is that the higher the bitrate or quality the more space you need to store your music. Instead of an album taking 100mb at 320 bitrate mp3, the same album recorded using FLAC can be approaching 800mb. The other potential downside of FLAC music files is that poorly recorded tracks sound dreadful and or if you have low quality headphones, these get exposed with high quality music recordings.

I have always thought FLAC to be one of the best audio file types available. But I was wrong. As part of my purchase of the Oppo HA-2 (click here for my review https://gavinsgadgets.com/2015/02/28/oppo-ha-2-portable-headphone-and-dac-review/ ) , I received an album using DSD audio files from a musician called David Elias. The space needed for 9 tracks was 1.9gb. Huge. The same 9 tracks as FLAC files needed 1gb less of storage space. So I copied the tracks across to my Note 4, opened USB Audio Player Pro app for android, went to the directory and started playing the music. My Oppo HA-2 was connected using my Sennheiser HD518 headphones. I have never, ever, ever heard anything quite so incredible. It was identical to having the musicians playing next to you, in your room and hearing all the nuances, with everything so crystal clear in ways that are hard to describe. Even though this was a free offer, I decided to drop David Elias a line thanking him for the free offer via Oppo and express my delights with the high audio quality and his music. David then took the time to explain how everything works, and why DSD audio is the way to go for HiRes Audio. I have included parts of David’s reply to me.

Here is what David said –

“DSD in fact opened up my ears to listening with its birth in the late 90’s. My good friend was piloting the original DSD 2-track Sony workstation with the Sony SACD Project and played some test master tape archive transfers to DSD.

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. It was so much better than anything digital I’d ever heard by far and anything on vinyl by some. It was like being present in the studio during the recording.

So i went on with Gus’s encouragement to self-produce the world’a first unsigned artist SACD as a hybrid 5.1 multichannel and stereo disc recorded in 2002 and released in 2003 called “The Window”.

“The Window” was recorded to the first multitrack Sony recorder later to become named Sonoma. It supported 8 tracks. We used a large pro studio analog mixer to mix the live studio band (up to 7 players) with no isolation to stereo. We captured 2 additional tracks as stereo from the room itself and spot mics to separate tracks on just my vocal, Sally’s dobro, Eric’s bass and Matt’s mandolin.

Gus and I mixed from those 8 tracks to 5.1 surround (5.0 really as we elected to avoid the sub channel and simply let the playback system crossover handle that) as well as a separate master DSD mix to stereo.Everything was mixed in native DSD on the Sony workstation using a Sony DSD mixer card and software. There was even no analog conversion and back to DSD for mixing. The result is 100% pure native DSD mastered on the same workstation. Your DSF files are identical.

There are no edits of any kind as the live analog mix and live room capture prevent that. Wasn’t interested in that anyway. What I wanted was to capture the real recording of the band performing together in the same room at the same time. No effects were used either just the natural reverb acoustics in the room (2 DSD tracks recorded) and delay and bleed between mics in proximity to each other (like Matt’s mando getting a little into my vocal mic cause he was sitting close to me and Marc drumming right behind me like in a show).

What you hear like on “The Old King” is a group of musicians carefully applying their craft in a spontaneous fashion. We had only run through the songs together once the night before our 3-day recording session began.

I tell you all this Gavin to help impress upon you the idea that less is more with audio reproduction. To me it takes first and foremost a good performance. Second it takes a great studio engineer or team to get the right mic choices and placement and application of their craft recording. Then it takes the best format for capturing the performance which for me and acoustic or live electric is DSD hands down. Analog tape is good but noisy and prone to immediate degradation on playback as tape wears and is magnetized or aged.

DSD digital is immortal and unchangeable. That’s why Sony and Philips developed it in the first place to archive their aging master stereo tape library.

We are at the dawn of what I hope is a mass revolution of music lovers seeking better quality recordings. We have had our ears compressed to death for 35+ years by CD technology and most digital recording. That started changing in 2000 with DSD but reached few and mostly only audiophiles listening to jazz and classical music, which was fine for them but left others out.

In the past year plus there are perhaps 300 DAC and player products that support HRA and DSD. What a revolution!

Within David’s email there was even more information too. It really has been an amazing insight.

David also mentioned the following places to look for HiRes audio music –

“I am represented along with some incredible recordings on these other websites where you can usually preview samples:

http://www.highresaudio.jp (Japan)
http://www.nativedsd.com (Netherlands)
http://www.highdeftapetransfers.com (US)
http://www.superhirez.com (US and Canada)

And of course my website http://www.davidelias.com

If you do go down this path, one word of warning – you will need lots of storage space or several 128gb memory cards, a purchase of a decent app like USB Audio Player Pro (£5) for android or Onkyo HF Player on iTunes, decent headphones (£100+) and a great headphone/DAC (£150+). The worst part is going back to 320mp3 music recordings, which is what most of my music library is ripped at, since everything sounds cr*p compared to the DSD audio tracks produced by David Elias.

Apple – We’ve Re-Invented Gold for the Apple Watch

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Via The Financial Times –

Jony Ive had an interview with the Financial Times yesterday which revealed snip buts on his life and the Apple Watch.

Sir Jonathan hinted that Apple may have invented an entirely new form of gold just for the new timepiece. No surprises here. Apparently, the molecules in Apple gold are closer together, making it twice as hard as standard gold.

And twice as expensive probably!

Apple to release iOS 8.2 next week – details of what’s new

Apple is due to release iOS 8.2 next week, in time for its big Apple Watch Event on Monday 9th March.

If you are wondering what is new below is a list covering most of the changes.

Health App improvements
-Adds the ability to select the unit of measurement for body temperature, weight, height, distance, and blood glucose
-Improves stability when dealing with large amounts of data
-Includes the ability to add and visualise workout sessions from 3rd-party apps
-Addresses an issue that may have prevented users from adding a photo in Medical ID
-Fixes units for vitamins and minerals
-Fixes an issue where Health data wouldn’t refresh after changes data source order
-Fixes an issue where some graphics showed no data values
-Adds a privacy setting that enables turning off tracking of steps, distance, and flights climbed

Stability Enhancements
-Increases stability of Mail
-Improves stability of Flyover in Maps
-Improves stability of Music
-Improves VoiceOver reliability
-Improves connectivity with Made for iPhone Hearing Aids

Bug Fixes
-Fixes an issue in Maps that prevented navigating to some favorite locations
-Addresses an issue where the last word in a quick reply message wasn’t autocorrected
-Fixes an issue where duplicate iTunes purchased content could prevent iCloud restore from completing
-Resolves an issue where some music or playlists didn’t sync from iTunes to the Music app
-Fixes an issue where deleted audiobooks sometimes remained on the device
-Resolves an issue that could prevent call audio from routing to car speakers while using Siri Eyes Free
-Fixes a Bluetooth calling issue where no audio is heard until the call is answered
-Fixes a timezone issue where Calendar events appear in GMT
-Addresses an issue that caused certain events in a custom reoccurring meeting to drop from Exchange calendar
-Fixes an certificate error that prevented configuring an Exchange account behind a third-party gateway
-Fixes an issue that could cause an organizer’s Exchange meeting notes to be overwritten
-Resolves an issue that prevented some Calendar events from automatically showing as “busy” after accepting an invite.

Source – bgr.com

Apple iPhone 6 versus Samsung Galaxy S6 – Stabilisation Test

Phandroid.com put the Samsung Galaxy S6 up against their iPhone 6 to test up the camera’s stabilisation prowess.

In case you’re wondering when I had my iPhone 6 Plus and pitted it against my Note 4, the Note 4 stabilisation was far superior to that on the iPhone 6 Plus. The 6 Plus video was all jerky but the Note 4 was smooth. Both phones were on a tripod and a mezzanine floor that was being impacted by vibrations from the go karting below.

Pebble announces the Pebble Steel Smartwatch – gold is similar to the Apple Watch

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Pebble announced yesterday the Pebble Time Steel. This is the stainless steel version of the Pebble Time, with the same interface and software, but in a machined metal case that comes in silver, gold and black finishes. Pebble have also increased the battery life by another 3 days to 10 days in total.

Also the new watches will have ‘Smartstraps,’ which allows third-party developers to build smart straps as add-ons to both the standard and Steel watches. The watch has a port on the back, which will allow hardware makers to access and communicate with the Pebble Time. The smart strap would add extra sensors and electronics, batteries perhaps, heart rate monitor, gps chip and more.

The Pebble Time Kickstarter has raised over $12 million so with over 54,500 backers having pre-ordered around 65,700 smartwatches. The new Pebble Time Steel will retail for $299 and will be available to early Kickstarter backers for $249. Existing backers can choose to upgrade to the Pebble Time Steel without losing their spot in the queue. However, Pebble Time Steel starts shipping in July, instead of May for the first crop of standard Pebble Time devices, and June for the current backer group.

A bold move and lets hope it works for Pebble. And that gold finish Pebble Time Steel looks fairly similar to the Apple Watch in rose gold!

Source – techradar.com

HTC Grip – Full details

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HTC announced their new fitness wearable in partnership with Under Armour.

The full specifications are –

– Small Size – 51.9 x 68.2 x 22.5 mm
, Inner circumference: 145.54mm
– Medium size – 60.98 x 74.57 x 22.5 mm, 
Inner circumference: 169.76mm
– Large size – 68.92 x 85.24 x 22.5 mm, 
Inner circumference: 199.51mm
– Display 1.8-inch inch 32 x 160 PMOLED mono flexible display with capacitive touch
– Platform – RTOS
– Processor – STM32L151QDH6
– Memory – 16MB Flash, 8MB SRAM
– Battery – 100 mAh rechargeable battery
– 2.5 days battery life or 5 hours w/GPS activated
– Sensors – Sensor Hub (STM32F411), G-sensor, Gyro, Compass, GPS, Light sensor
– Connectivity – BLE (Bluetooth 3.0 and 4.0),
USB charging cable
– Other Vibration notifications, IP57 Dust & Water Resistant, Shock Resistant (compliant with MIL-STD-810G 516.6 Procedure I, IV)

Apple Watch – new information

From the New York Times –

” Apple has said the watch battery is estimated to last a full day, requiring a user to charge it at night, similar to a smartphone. The company also developed a yet-to-be-announced feature called Power Reserve, a mode that will run the watch on low energy but display only the time, according to one employee.”

This feature is a simple idea but rather useful. At the end of the day it is a watch that is meant to tell the time.

Gav & Dave’s Tech Podcast is live – Episode 32 “Live from MWC” – Please RT

As you know, I co-host a monthly podcast with David from UKMobileTech called Gav & Dave’s Tech Podcast. It is a light hearted tech podcast broadcast.

To subscribe click here for iTunes or copy and paste this link into your favourite podcast app.

Episode 32, Live from MWC is now live for your listening pleasure.

If you have enjoyed the podcast, please leave a 5 star review in iTunes. It helps others find our podcast. Go now and leave a review !

If you have any comments, questions or feedback, please drop a line at feedback@gdtpodcast.com or in the comments below.

And finally, our thanks to Audible as today’s podcast is supported by Audible- get a FREE audiobook download and 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/GavDave . Over 150,000 titles to choose from for your iPhone, Android, Kindle or mp3 player. No obligation.

It’s a free trial so give it a go if you haven’t already.

If you are buying anything on Amazon, please use the link below. This will help support Gavin’s Gadgets with some of the running costs and using the link won’t cost you anymore. Thanks in advance.

GavGadgets@Amazon

Looking to buy a Phone, Smartwatch, Headphones, Smart Devices and more – read the review first – all the top devices reviewed

Tablets/Laptops/Chromebooks

Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 Tablet review
Samsung Galaxy NotePro 12.2 – 9 Part Review
Sony Xperia Z Tablet – 12 Part Review
Nvidia Shield Tablet –  7 Part review
Acer V15 Nitro Windows 8.1 laptop review
Acer C720 Chromebook review

Amazon Devices

Amazon Fire Phone –  2 Part review

Apple Phones

Apple iPhone 6 Plus – 24 Part Review

BlackBerry Phones

BlackBerry Passport 10 Part Mammoth review

Android Phones

Yotaphone 2 –  4 Part review

Samsung Note Edge – 14 Part Review
Samsung Note 4 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy Alpha –  2 Part review
Samsung Galaxy K Zoom – 26 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy S5 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Note 3 – 16 Part review
Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom – 18 Part Review
Samsung Note 2 – 8 Part review

LG G3 review – 31 Part Review
LG G Flex – 3 Part Review

HTC Desire Eye – 13 Part Review
HTC One M8 – 11 Part review
HTC One M7 – 20 Part Review

Acer S55 review – 6 Part Review

Honor Holly –  4 Part review
Honor 6 – 12 Part Review
Huawei Ascend P6 Review

Sony Xperia Z1 Compact review
Sony Z Ultra views and Camera Samples
Sony Xperia Z1 – 10 Part Review

Motorola Moto X – 4 Part review
Motorola Moto G – 8 Part review

Windows Phone

Nokia Lumia 1520 – 6 Part review
Nokia Lumia 820 – 5 Part review
Nokia Lumia 1020 – 10 Part review
Nokia Lumia 925 – 9 Part review
Nokia Lumia 620 – 7 Part review

Fitness, Watches and Wearables

FitBit Charge HR review

Acer Liquid Heap Smartband review

LG G Watch R – review
LG G Watch – 9 Part Review

Samsung Gear S – 9 Part Review
Samsung Gear Neo Impressions
Samsung Gear Fit review
Samsung Gear 5 Part review

Pebble Smartwatch review

Headphones, Speakers and Amps/DACS

V-Moda Crossfade M100 headphone review
Plantronics BackBeat Pro bluetooth headphones review
Fiio RC-HD1 Headphone cable review
Sennheiser HD518 Headphone review
Philips Fidelio M1BT Headphone review
AKG K845 Bluetooth Headphone review
Sony SBH80 Bluetooth headphones review
Sony XBA-H1 Headphone Review
Logitech UE Headphones – 3 part Master review
Audio Technica ATH-AD900x Headphone review

Oppo HA-2 Portable Amplifier and DAC review
Cayin C5 Portable Headphone amplifier review
Fiio E12 – master review
HiFiMeDIY Sabre Android USB DAC review
Little Dot MKIV Tube Headphone Amplifier review

App Enabled Accessories

Belkin WeMo Smart light Bulb starter kit review

Mipow Playbulb Rainbow review
Mipow Playbulb review

Imperihome Pro review
Netatmo Urban Weather station – 5 Part review

Camera Lenses

Shoulderpod S1 smartphone rig review
Sony QX10 and QX100 – 13 Part master review

If you are buying anything on Amazon, please use the link below. This will help support Gavin’s Gadgets with all the running costs and more and won’t be any different in cost. Thanks in advance.

GavGadgets@Amazon

Apple Watch – yours for $75,000 – details

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Brikk has announced Lux Watch, an expensive line of modified diamond-studded Apple Watches. The Lux Watch is available in three versions — Standard, Deluxe, and Omni — with prices set based on its materials, size, and the amount of diamonds included. A Lux Watch Standard starts at $7,500, while the Lux Watch Omni in 24-karat yellow gold can reach a price as high as $75,000, with 12.30 carats of diamonds on the 42mm version of the watch. Brikk is now accepting pre-orders on Lux Watch, which will ship four to six weeks after the Apple Watch’s release.

So one of each then ☺

Source ilounge