I wear hearing istruments myself so I guess it's a matter of horses for
courses here.
I run my instruments in "Flat" mode all the time when I'm at home though
when I'm out I change them but that's another matter for another time
perhaps.
Some hearing instruments are better than others and - whilst I won't say
mine are the best because they're not - I did make a point of having mine
custom built and adjusted to my hhearing situation.
Sorry, I'm not one who trusts headphones that calibrate themselves or even
noise cancelling headphones.



-----Original Message-----
From: all-audio@groups.io <all-audio@groups.io> On Behalf Of John Heath via
Groups.Io
Sent: Saturday, 6 October 2018 10:45 AM
To: all-audio@groups.io
Subject: Re: [all-audio] Differences between Winamp and VLC?

Dane! I beg to differ with you on one point. As my hearing gets worse I find
the equalizer helpful. I heard of a pair of head-phones which actually
performed a mini hearing test on you and adjusted the sound accordingly. 
Sadly they run off a phone ap so were useless to me. Also there were
engineering bugs which the reviewer found disappointing.
-----Original Message-----
From: Dane Trethowan
Sent: Friday, October 05, 2018 8:20 PM
To: all-audio@groups.io
Subject: Re: [all-audio] Diferences between Winamp and VLC?

For what its worth from me and thanks for starting this discussion.
Its been a very long while since I used Winamp, why did I stop using it?
Because Winamp kept crashing when I tried to play video files recorded in
standard TS format from my video TV tuners that I use still ttill this day
though different models obviously.
So then began my search for a new player that was easy to use and did what I
believe a player needs to do, play the track when I press play, move to the
next track or skip through a track when I press or hold the forward button
etc.
VLC did these things and many more besides.
I grant you, VLC is not the friendliest App to get around but one can get
around much of it using the JAWS cursor or whatever your thing is called on
your Screen Reader.
If I had my way equalisers in players wouldn't be present.
I know I sound harsh but the amount of times I've seen equalisers abused to
the point that people manage to stuff their speaker systems up causes me to
perhaps take this view.
A good sounding pair of speakers which don't cost all that much these days
shouldn't require any additional medaling in the form of an equaliser.
I went to someone's house the other day, this chap had what I would call a
perfectly serviceable pair of Altec Lansing computer speakers, well at least
I would have termed this speaker system in that way when it was bought but
after this chap had applied God only knows how many equalisers in the audio
chain? Well this respectable speaker system had been turned to the sound of
mud literally, sure! Enough bottom but for what, to demolish the house and
perhaps Next doors dwelling too? It certainly didn't sound good.
And the top, well it was there but incredibly harsh to the point that my
ears felt sore just trying to listen to the thing.
Where was the Mid-range? Lost somewhere in the cocofany of noise.
Anyway back to the point of VLC and I'm very pleased to say that the
developers are slowly but surely making accessibility fixes as updates roll
out and I reckon they're doing a fair job since VLC is an open source
package.
I use VLC on other devices such as my Apple Mac machines, iPhone and iPads
and Android with pleasing results.


-----Original Message-----
From: all-audio@groups.io <all-audio@groups.io> On Behalf Of JM Casey
Sent: Saturday, 6 October 2018 8:05 AM
To: all-audio@groups.io
Subject: Re: [all-audio] Diferences between Winamp and VLC?

The VlC equalizer is certainly a lot less convenient to set and save
settings than the Winamp one using a screen-reader. One can easily adopt any
of the presets, but saving your own settings requires messing with the
not-too-accessible filters within the preferences dialog box. Actually the
whole design is weird and I wish that Video Lan gave the ability to easily
save and load multiple equalizer settings in VLC.

Just curious, but why not have both programmes? I watch a lot of movies,
especially with my sighted partner, and VLC is without doubt  an awesome
video player and far more versatile and just better at this than winamp ever
was. However, I still use Winamp for my audio needs and it works exceedingly
well for this purpose even in Windows 10.

-----Original Message-----
From: all-audio@groups.io <all-audio@groups.io> On Behalf Of Brian Olesen
Sent: October 5, 2018 5:50 PM
To: all-audio@groups.io
Subject: [all-audio] Diferences between Winamp and VLC?

Hi all you nice audiofiles,

Well I use VLC myself, but I have an old fascion student, who prefers
Winamp.

I want to persuade him to do the switch.

But how is it with information about timing lenghth of files in minutes and
seconds and such. Can we easily get to that info also in VLC?

Are there other fields where VLC lacks information compared to Winamp?

Is it actually the other way around?



Best regards

Brian









 






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