Hey Anders,

 Sorry what was that you said?
Can you speak up a bit!

-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com> On 
Behalf Of Anders Holmberg
Sent: Monday, 9 September 2019 9:33 PM
To: 'Robert Cole' via MacVisionaries <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: How to protect your hearing with iOS 13 and watchOS 6, 9 to 5 Mac

Hi!
I don’t like others to tell me how to protect my hearing either.
I hope this can be turned off.
Ozzy  should be listened to quite loud.
THat’s what Heavy Metal is all about.
/A

> 9 sep. 2019 kl. 10:59 skrev Simon A Fogarty <si...@blinky-net.com>:
> 
> Hi Mark,
> 
> What's the use in having systems that turn the volume down when your trying 
> to listen to music such as I listen to.
> 
> Ozzy Osbourn or rage against the machine As well as pink Floyd need to 
> be listened to loudly otherwise your head doesn't rattle.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of M. Taylor
> Sent: Monday, 9 September 2019 1:21 PM
> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> Subject: How to protect your hearing with iOS 13 and watchOS 6, 9 to 5 
> Mac
> 
> How to protect your hearing with iOS 13 and watchOS 6 By Chance Miller
> 
> watchOS 6 and iOS 13 are just a few weeks away from being released to 
> the public, and both updates include new features that you might not 
> have even known you needed. With this year's watchOS 6 release for 
> Apple Watch and iOS
> 13 for iPhone, Apple is implementing a pair of new hearing features, designed 
> to help you prevent exposing yourself to loud environments and headphones 
> levels for extended periods of time.
> Here's how both of those new features work.
> 
> Headphone Audio Level
> In iOS 13, you can now view audio levels from the headphones you use. Apple 
> categorizes your headphone volume levels into two decibel levels: "OK" to 
> "Loud."
> 
> How can you find this data? On your iPhone running iOS 13, open the Health 
> app and tap the "Search" tab along the bottom. You should then see a new 
> "Hearing" option, tap that and look for "Headphone Audio Levels."
> 
> In this section of the Health app, you can see detailed information about 
> your headphone audio levels over the last hour, day, week, month, and year 
> (when sufficient data is available). Apple then categorizes your headphone 
> volume level into "OK" or "Loud." Long-term exposure under 80 decibels is 
> considered "OK" while "repeated, long-term export to sound at or above 80 
> decibels" could lead to hearing damage and is considered "Loud."
> 
> By tapping the "Show All Filters" button, you can also filter audio levels by 
> headphone type, seeing which headphones promote the best listening habits and 
> which are often louder than others. This interface also shows daily average, 
> your volume range, and more.
> 
> Apple says that Headphone Audio Level works best with its Beats and AirPods 
> products, but that levels can be estimated when using other headphones.
> Here's how Apple explains the feature:
> 
> This represents the volume of your headphone audio measured in decibels (dB). 
> It can be helpful to understand how long you're exposed to loud audio as this 
> can affect your hearing.
> 
> These measurements are most accurate when using Apple or Beats headphones.
> Audio played through other headphones or speakers connected via a wire can be 
> estimated based on the volume of your device.
> 
> Noise app
> Meanwhile, Apple Watch is also adding its own new feature for helping protect 
> your hearing. The new watchOS Noise app is designed to alert you with your 
> Apple Watch when you're in a loud environment that could damage your hearing.
> 
> To setup this feature, you'll want to open the Apple Watch companion app on 
> your iPhone. From there, look for the new "Noise" option among the list of 
> Apple-developed applications. By default, the Noise app will alert you when 
> your environment sound level exceeds 90 decibels. You can adjust that to your 
> liking, however.
> At 90dB, the World Health Organization says the volume could damage your 
> hearing after 30 minutes of exposure per day
> .     80 decibels, Limit: About 5 hours / day
> .     85 decibels, Limit: About 2 hours / day
> .     90 decibels, Limit: About 30 minutes / day
> .     95 decibels, Limit: About 10 minutes / day
> .     100 decibels, Limit: About 3 minutes / day
> 
> On your Apple Watch itself, the Noise app provides a live-updating bar graph 
> that shows the noise level of your environment with an explanation of the 
> sound levels. The app will either informing you sound levels are not harmful, 
> or that you should consider using hearing protection.
> 
> There's also a Noise app complication that offers live updates about the 
> noise level of your environment. The complication will either indicate that 
> the noise level is okay or too loud.
> 
> Wrap up
> watchOS 6 and iOS 13 include a pair of notable features to help protect your 
> hearing. The Headphone Audio Level feature aims to help you better protect 
> your ears while using headphones, while the Noise app for watchOS is aimed at 
> warning you preemptively when you're in a loud environment.
> What do you think of these features? Let us know down in the comments.
> 
> Original Article at:
> https://9to5mac.com/2019/09/08/hearing-with-ios-13-and-watchos-6/
> 
> 
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