How do I have a bigger library of music than 128GB?
This.
People here are insane.
Indeed. And nice TMNT 2K3 avatar. I enjoyed it back when it was on Fox Box, 4KidsTV and CW4Kids.
I found a 500 GB SeaGate Wireless Portable Hard Drive, but it has mixed reviews.
I bought the 128GB iPhone 6 for that reason – more space = more music. Plus space for your contacts, texts, documents, apps, pictures – everything. It’s not just 128GB of music.
I’ve got a 16 GB iPhone 5C, which immediately went down to 12 GB, at least now it is.
These days, 128 GB is not that crazy.
It’s only 6 GB less than my iTunes library! (134.68 GB) :p
There’s got to be a better way to say that.
Right on.
I have it on my phone because I keep my lossless collection on it. Which is exponentially large.
hehehe
Gotta tell ya, it makes a lot more sense to just be carrying extra sd cards if you absolutely need to have more space.
I believe that having it all in one place is more efficient.
I have it on my phone because I keep my lossless collection on it. Which is exponentially large.
I know it’s real, but fake ones are becoming quite common. What’s the safest place to purchase one? Is the micro USB port below the phone useful for porting extra storage?
OTG for usb port on phone with flashdrive working well, but drain battery and not convenient.
http://i.imgur.com/UXtX5pW.gif
All in one place, on me at all times.
They’re not fake.
Numbers is a real issue, and they can legally say this or that.
They stipulate on their site that they assume 1MB = 1,000,000 bytes
https://www.sandisk.com/home/memory-cards/sd-cards/ultra-plus-sd
You can read about differences in numbers:
https://superuser.com/questions/373579/is-it-true-that-1-mb-can-mean-either-1000000-bytes-1024000-bytes-or-1048576-by
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_prefix#List_of_SI_prefixes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix#Specific_units_of_IEC_60027-2_A.2_and_ISO.2FIEC_80000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigabyte
In the old days, 1MB = 1K bytes was applied to internet transfer rates while 1MB = 1024 bytes was for storage.
You can call them fake all you want. But they’re not. They’re technically correct and %100 legal.
You just have to deal with the current market limitations and blame blind users for accepting the market as it is.
If your music is lossless, convert to AAC@192. It will be transparent to the source.
Don’t associate it with MP3 quality or numbers. AAC@192 does not equal MP3@192.
Unless you’re under the age of 25 with expensive foriegn named headphones (Japanese and German brands are still the gimmick; generic brands have even adopted their names to sound like prestigious labels, like knock-off movies pretending to be box office titles), you won’t know the difference.
It also depends on the software player.
VLC is simple. You won’t really get anything advanced on Android with VLC.
If you pay for an app, get Neutron player.
It supports ReplayGain and floating-point decoding for precision. (as apposed to something simple like VLC that would probably decode lossy sources as 16bit integers.)
It didn’t get through the first time.
It’s not about gibibytes v. gigabytes
It’s not about gibibytes v. gigabytes
^He’s right. There are several YouTube videos on YouTube alerting buyers of their existence.
What about a travel router with USB and SD card ports?
Go into a store where they’re not likely to sell fake stuff.
Convert it all to 192/AAC.
Prioritize your cards then just switch them like a human.
At this point, you’re going full borg.