Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-19 Thread Raul A. Gallegos
David, I just submitted my review. I thought I had in the past, but I 
see I had not. My bad. In any case, thanks again for your contributions 
with the app and on this list as well.


--
Raul A. Gallegos
Until I was 13, I thought my name was 'Shut Up.'  -- Joe Namath
Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

On 9/18/2012 1:16 PM, David Morton wrote:

Hey guys!

Quick favor to ask.  If you're enjoying the app, and you like the
update, would you mind dropping by the iTunes store and leaving a
review?  The link to the app, again, is http://bit.ly/MuxicApp.

Unfortunately, the only review I have for this version so far is someone
calling me a con-artist, which, I hope I've convinced most of you that
I'm not.

In any case, a couple of good reviews from a few of you could do wonders
in helping the App's reputation.

-David

On Friday, September 7, 2012 1:57:30 PM UTC-5, David Morton wrote:

Brett,

No, I'm not planning on adding any equalizers to the app.
  Unfortunately, EQ handling is a far more complex task than simply
normalizing the volume.  While it may be on the long, long term road
map, I wouldn't count on it.

Glad you like the app!  I have another update already out to Apple
to fix some of the 4S crashing issues, and you can also expect some
more goodies thrown in for good measure.

As a side note, when 4.0 comes out soon, you might notice that the
Stations tab is missing.  I've moved it into the Library to make
room for another really exciting change.

-David

On Thursday, September 6, 2012 2:09:11 AM UTC-5, Brettsta wrote:

Hi David,.

This is a great app and the crossfade is awesome..

I am just wondering if equalisers might be on your long-term
road map?.

Thanks Brett.

Sent from Brett's iPhone

On 06/09/2012, at 5:52 AM, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:


3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should
be following very quickly, if it's not already out.

This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent
crashes many of you are experiencing.

On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan
Mosen wrote:

I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to
Muxic. For example I
find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver
slower to respond
as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps,
but I suspect
that's because of it's intensive nature.

Jonathan

-Original Message-
From: vip...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Raul A. Gallegos
Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m.
To: vip...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app.
I for one feel
it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the
time to join this
busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn
off the
normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the
slower response times
as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to
crash with actual
reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know.

All the best.

--
Raul A. Gallegos
Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves.
After marriage, the
'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page:
http://raulgallegos.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote:
 I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.
 I never
 noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver
user.

 What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of
things going on
 audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it
validating
 timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio
normalization, etc,
 etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the
heavy use of the
 audio system.

 Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off
 Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still
have the same issue.

 Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure
I'll be able to fix.

 That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in
the next few
 days when Apple pushes

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-18 Thread David Morton
Hey guys! 

Quick favor to ask.  If you're enjoying the app, and you like the update, 
would you mind dropping by the iTunes store and leaving a review?  The link 
to the app, again, is http://bit.ly/MuxicApp. 

Unfortunately, the only review I have for this version so far is someone 
calling me a con-artist, which, I hope I've convinced most of you that I'm 
not.  

In any case, a couple of good reviews from a few of you could do wonders in 
helping the App's reputation.  

-David

On Friday, September 7, 2012 1:57:30 PM UTC-5, David Morton wrote:

 Brett, 

 No, I'm not planning on adding any equalizers to the app.  Unfortunately, 
 EQ handling is a far more complex task than simply normalizing the volume. 
  While it may be on the long, long term road map, I wouldn't count on it.

 Glad you like the app!  I have another update already out to Apple to fix 
 some of the 4S crashing issues, and you can also expect some more goodies 
 thrown in for good measure. 

 As a side note, when 4.0 comes out soon, you might notice that the 
 Stations tab is missing.  I've moved it into the Library to make room for 
 another really exciting change.  

 -David

 On Thursday, September 6, 2012 2:09:11 AM UTC-5, Brettsta wrote:

 Hi David,. 

 This is a great app and the crossfade is awesome.. 

 I am just wondering if equalisers might be on your long-term road map?. 

 Thanks Brett. 

 Sent from Brett's iPhone

 On 06/09/2012, at 5:52 AM, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:

 3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be 
 following very quickly, if it's not already out.  

 This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many of 
 you are experiencing. 

 On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example 
 I 
 find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to 
 respond 
 as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect 
 that's because of it's intensive nature. 

 Jonathan 

 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com] On 
 Behalf 
 Of Raul A. Gallegos 
 Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m. 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

 Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one 
 feel 
 it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this 
 busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
 normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response 
 times 
 as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with 
 actual 
 reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know. 

 All the best. 

 -- 
 Raul A. Gallegos 
 Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, 
 the 
 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com 
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47 
 Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47 

 On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote: 
  I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
  noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user. 
  
  What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
  audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
  timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
  etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
  audio system. 
  
  Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
  Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same 
 issue. 
  
  Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to 
 fix. 
  
  That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
  days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've 
  fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
  release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies. 
  
  Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
  library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
  creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music 
  suggestions based on the music that is already in your library. 
  
  Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
  thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
  kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
  purchase. 
  
  -David 
  
  On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote: 
  
  Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the 
  Muxic 
  app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 
  
  
  -Original Message- 
  From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
  Of Wayne Merritt 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-18 Thread Wil James
Got any chances for promo codes?  Before anyone judges me and say I'm a
cheap skate, I am not.  I would be willing to support any developer who goes
out of his way to make something I use accessible.  I know a buck isn't
much.  Despite what the fed says, economic times are hard these days.  I'm
not trying to make anyone feel sorry for me, it's just the way it is.  Gotta
eat, you know?

I'll be willing to give a glowing review to Muxic.

---
iMessage/E-mail: w...@wilanddenise.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/wiljames
Personal web page: http://www.wilanddenise.com/wil
--
You couldn't be me even if you wanted to after all I've been through, you
wouldn't know! - Hellyeah



-Original Message-
From: David Morton [mailto:da...@isamorton.com]
Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2012 1:16 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Hey guys!

Quick favor to ask.  If you're enjoying the app, and you like the update,
would you mind dropping by the iTunes store and leaving a review?  The link
to the app, again, is http://bit.ly/MuxicApp.

Unfortunately, the only review I have for this version so far is someone
calling me a con-artist, which, I hope I've convinced most of you that I'm
not. 

In any case, a couple of good reviews from a few of you could do wonders in
helping the App's reputation. 

-David

On Friday, September 7, 2012 1:57:30 PM UTC-5, David Morton wrote:

 Brett,

 No, I'm not planning on adding any equalizers to the app. 
 Unfortunately, EQ handling is a far more complex task than simply
normalizing the volume.
  While it may be on the long, long term road map, I wouldn't count on it.

 Glad you like the app!  I have another update already out to Apple to
 fix some of the 4S crashing issues, and you can also expect some more
 goodies thrown in for good measure.

 As a side note, when 4.0 comes out soon, you might notice that the
 Stations tab is missing.  I've moved it into the Library to make room
 for another really exciting change.

 -David

 On Thursday, September 6, 2012 2:09:11 AM UTC-5, Brettsta wrote:

 Hi David,.

 This is a great app and the crossfade is awesome..

 I am just wondering if equalisers might be on your long-term road map?.

 Thanks Brett.

 Sent from Brett's iPhone

 On 06/09/2012, at 5:52 AM, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:

 3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be
 following very quickly, if it's not already out.

 This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many
 of you are experiencing.

 On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For
 example I find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver
 slower to respond as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those
 two apps, but I suspect that's because of it's intensive nature.

 Jonathan

 -Original Message-
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com] On
 Behalf Of Raul A. Gallegos
 Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m.
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one
 feel it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to
 join this busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn
 off the normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower
 response times as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app
 to crash with actual reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you
 know.

 All the best.

 --
 Raul A. Gallegos
 Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After
 marriage, the 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page:
 http://raulgallegos.com
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
 Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

 On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote:
  I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never
  noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user.
 
  What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on
  audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it
  validating timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio
  normalization, etc, etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected
  by the heavy use of the audio system.
 
  Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off
  Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same
 issue.
 
  Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able
  to
 fix.
 
  That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next
  few days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store. 
  I've fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page
  for the release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies.
 
  Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to
  the library (where it probably should have been all along), and
  I'm

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-07 Thread David Morton
Brett, 

No, I'm not planning on adding any equalizers to the app.  Unfortunately, 
EQ handling is a far more complex task than simply normalizing the volume. 
 While it may be on the long, long term road map, I wouldn't count on it.

Glad you like the app!  I have another update already out to Apple to fix 
some of the 4S crashing issues, and you can also expect some more goodies 
thrown in for good measure. 

As a side note, when 4.0 comes out soon, you might notice that the Stations 
tab is missing.  I've moved it into the Library to make room for another 
really exciting change.  

-David

On Thursday, September 6, 2012 2:09:11 AM UTC-5, Brettsta wrote:

 Hi David,. 

 This is a great app and the crossfade is awesome.. 

 I am just wondering if equalisers might be on your long-term road map?. 

 Thanks Brett. 

 Sent from Brett's iPhone

 On 06/09/2012, at 5:52 AM, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: 
 wrote:

 3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be 
 following very quickly, if it's not already out.  

 This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many of 
 you are experiencing. 

 On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example 
 I 
 find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to 
 respond 
 as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect 
 that's because of it's intensive nature. 

 Jonathan 

 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
 Of Raul A. Gallegos 
 Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m. 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

 Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one feel 
 it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this 
 busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
 normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response 
 times 
 as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with actual 
 reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know. 

 All the best. 

 -- 
 Raul A. Gallegos 
 Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, 
 the 
 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com 
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47 
 Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47 

 On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote: 
  I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
  noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user. 
  
  What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
  audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
  timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
  etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
  audio system. 
  
  Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
  Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same 
 issue. 
  
  Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to 
 fix. 
  
  That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
  days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've 
  fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
  release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies. 
  
  Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
  library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
  creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music 
  suggestions based on the music that is already in your library. 
  
  Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
  thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
  kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
  purchase. 
  
  -David 
  
  On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote: 
  
  Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the 
  Muxic 
  app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 
  
  
  -Original Message- 
  From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
  Of Wayne Merritt 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
  To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
  I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a 
  little 
  slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in 
 and 
  out of 
  the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly 
  full of 
  music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic 
 is 
  slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, 
 the 
  processes return to their normal

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-06 Thread Brett
Hi David,. 

This is a great app and the crossfade is awesome.. 

I am just wondering if equalisers might be on your long-term road map?. 

Thanks Brett. 

Sent from Brett's iPhone

On 06/09/2012, at 5:52 AM, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:

 3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be following 
 very quickly, if it's not already out.  
 
 This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many of you 
 are experiencing. 
 
 On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:
 I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example I 
 find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to respond 
 as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect 
 that's because of it's intensive nature. 
 
 Jonathan 
 
 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
 Of Raul A. Gallegos 
 Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m. 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
 
 Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one feel 
 it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this 
 busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
 normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response times 
 as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with actual 
 reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know. 
 
 All the best. 
 
 -- 
 Raul A. Gallegos 
 Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, the 
 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com 
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47 
 Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47 
 
 On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote: 
  I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
  noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user. 
  
  What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
  audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
  timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
  etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
  audio system. 
  
  Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
  Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue. 
  
  Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix. 
  
  That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
  days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've  
  fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
  release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies. 
  
  Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
  library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
  creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music  
  suggestions based on the music that is already in your library. 
  
  Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
  thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
  kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
  purchase. 
  
  -David 
  
  On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote: 
  
  Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the 
  Muxic 
  app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 
  
  
  -Original Message- 
  From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
  Of Wayne Merritt 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
  To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
  I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a 
  little 
  slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and 
  out of 
  the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly 
  full of 
  music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is 
  slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the 
  processes return to their normal speed. 
  Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1? 
  
  Regards, 
  Wayne Merritt 
  
  On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: wrote: 
Fred, 

I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about 
playlist 

folders. 

Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
 Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which 
  Apple 
is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will 
 change 
soon, and 

I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist 
hierarchy

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread David Morton
I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never noticed it 
myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user.  

What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating timing 
for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, etc.  I'm 
wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the audio system. 

Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off Normalization 
entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue.  

Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix.  

That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few days 
when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've fixed the two 
Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the release after that, 
and I've also added a few more goodies.  

Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the library 
(where it probably should have been all along), and I'm creating a 
Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music suggestions 
based on the music that is already in your library.  

Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and thanks 
for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the kinks.  I'm 
doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your purchase.  

-David

On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote:

 Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the Muxic 
 app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 


 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
 Of Wayne Merritt 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

 I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a little 
 slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and out 
 of 
 the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly full of 
 music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is 
 slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the 
 processes return to their normal speed. 
 Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1? 

 Regards, 
 Wayne Merritt 

 On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: wrote: 
  Fred, 
  
  I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about 
  playlist 
  
  folders. 
  
  Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
   Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple 
  is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change 
  soon, and 
  
  I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist 
  hierarchy intact. 
  
  -David 
  
  On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.netwrote: 
  
   Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or 
  maybe, making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and 
  attempt to go through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in 
  all of my other music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with 
  the app you are speaking about? 
  Fred Olver 
  
  
  - Original Message - 
  *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript: 
  *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM 
  *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
  Yes, that's correct. 
  
  Jonathan 
  
   -- 
  *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto: 
  vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller 
  *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m. 
  *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
   I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the 
  library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I 
  don't have the app. 
  
  
  
  *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto: 
  vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson 
  *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM 
  *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
  
  
  Jonathan, 
  
  Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone? 
  
  
  
  On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote: 
  
  
  
   Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked 
  out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic 
  app is now 
  
  pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the 
  dock 
  
  of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the 
  description from the App Store. 
  
  
  
  Music lovers love Muxic. 
  
  Why? 
  
  Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
  From crossfading to volume normalization

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread Raul A. Gallegos
Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one 
feel it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join 
this busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response 
times as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with 
actual reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know.


All the best.

--
Raul A. Gallegos
Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, 
the 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous

Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote:

I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never noticed
it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user.

What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on
audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating
timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc,
etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the
audio system.

Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off Normalization
entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue.

Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix.

That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few
days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've fixed
the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the release
after that, and I've also added a few more goodies.

Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the
library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm creating
a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music
suggestions based on the music that is already in your library.

Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and
thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the
kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your
purchase.

-David

On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote:

Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the
Muxic
app. This does not happen when using the native Music app.


-Original Message-
From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
[mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf
Of Wayne Merritt
Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a
little
slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and
out of
the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly
full of
music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is
slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the
processes return to their normal speed.
Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1?

Regards,
Wayne Merritt

On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: wrote:
  Fred,
 
  I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about
  playlist
 
  folders.
 
  Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem.
   Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which
Apple
  is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change
  soon, and
 
  I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist
  hierarchy intact.
 
  -David
 
  On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net
wrote:
 
   Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or
  maybe, making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music
and
  attempt to go through it by artist, I also see all of the
artists in
  all of my other music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with
  the app you are speaking about?
  Fred Olver
 
 
  - Original Message -
  *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript:
  *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
  *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
  *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out
 
  Yes, that's correct.
 
  Jonathan
 
   --
  *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
  vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller
  *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
  *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
  *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out
 
   I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it
from the
  library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I
  don't have the app.
 
 
 
  *From:* vip

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread Jonathan Mosen
I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example I
find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to respond
as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect
that's because of it's intensive nature.

Jonathan 

-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Raul A. Gallegos
Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one feel
it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this
busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the
normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response times
as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with actual
reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know.

All the best.

--
Raul A. Gallegos
Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, the
'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote:
 I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
 noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user.

 What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
 audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
 timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
 etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
 audio system.

 Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
 Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue.

 Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix.

 That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
 days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've 
 fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
 release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies.

 Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
 library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
 creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music 
 suggestions based on the music that is already in your library.

 Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
 thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
 kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
 purchase.

 -David

 On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote:

 Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the
 Muxic
 app. This does not happen when using the native Music app.


 -Original Message-
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf
 Of Wayne Merritt
 Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a
 little
 slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and
 out of
 the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly
 full of
 music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is
 slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the
 processes return to their normal speed.
 Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1?

 Regards,
 Wayne Merritt

 On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: wrote:
   Fred,
  
   I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about
   playlist
  
   folders.
  
   Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem.
Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which
 Apple
   is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will
change
   soon, and
  
   I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist
   hierarchy intact.
  
   -David
  
   On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net
 wrote:
  
Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or
   maybe, making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music
 and
   attempt to go through it by artist, I also see all of the
 artists in
   all of my other music folders. Has this problem been oliviated
with
   the app you are speaking about?
   Fred Olver
  
  
   - Original Message -
   *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript:
   *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
   *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
   *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread David Morton
3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be following 
very quickly, if it's not already out.  

This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many of 
you are experiencing. 

On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example I 
 find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to respond 
 as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect 
 that's because of it's intensive nature. 

 Jonathan 

 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
 Of Raul A. Gallegos 
 Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m. 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

 Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one feel 
 it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this 
 busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
 normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response times 
 as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with actual 
 reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know. 

 All the best. 

 -- 
 Raul A. Gallegos 
 Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, the 
 'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com 
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47 
 Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47 

 On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote: 
  I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
  noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user. 
  
  What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
  audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
  timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
  etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
  audio system. 
  
  Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
  Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same 
 issue. 
  
  Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to 
 fix. 
  
  That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
  days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've 
  fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
  release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies. 
  
  Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
  library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
  creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music 
  suggestions based on the music that is already in your library. 
  
  Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
  thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
  kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
  purchase. 
  
  -David 
  
  On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote: 
  
  Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the 
  Muxic 
  app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 
  
  
  -Original Message- 
  From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf 
  Of Wayne Merritt 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
  To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
  Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
  
  I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a 
  little 
  slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and 
  out of 
  the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly 
  full of 
  music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic 
 is 
  slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, 
 the 
  processes return to their normal speed. 
  Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1? 
  
  Regards, 
  Wayne Merritt 
  
  On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript: wrote: 
Fred, 

I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking 
 about 
playlist 

folders. 

Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
 Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which 
  Apple 
is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will 
 change 
soon, and 

I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist 
hierarchy intact. 

-David 

On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net 
  wrote: 

 Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread Ron Pelletier
Hi all,

 

Its out in Canada also.  Just updated.

 

Ron  Danvers

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of David Morton
Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2012 3:53 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Cc: jmo...@mosen.org
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

3.0.1 is out in the U.S. App Store, and internationally should be following
very quickly, if it's not already out.  

 

This update should (crossing fingers) solve the frequent crashes many of you
are experiencing. 

On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 11:54:27 AM UTC-5, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

I've seen the sluggishness, but it's not exclusive to Muxic. For example I 
find on my 4S that Downcast and Musicdock make VoiceOver slower to respond 
as well. Perhaps Muxic is a bit worse than those two apps, but I suspect 
that's because of it's intensive nature. 

Jonathan 

-Original Message- 
From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com
javascript: ] On Behalf 
Of Raul A. Gallegos 
Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2012 1:11 a.m. 
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

Hello David, thanks for your responses regarding this app. I for one feel 
it's a 5-star app and am happy that you have taken the time to join this 
busy list to give feedback and answer questions. I'll turn off the 
normalization and see what happens. I don't mind the slower response times 
as much as I mind the crashing. If I can get the app to crash with actual 
reproducible steps, I'll be sure to let you know. 

All the best. 

-- 
Raul A. Gallegos 
Before marriage, a man yearns for the woman he loves. After marriage, the 
'Y' becomes silent. -  Anonymous Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com 
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47 
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47 

On 9/5/2012 8:35 AM, David Morton wrote: 
 I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never 
 noticed it myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user. 
 
 What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on 
 audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating 
 timing for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, 
 etc.  I'm wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the 
 audio system. 
 
 Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off 
 Normalization entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue. 
 
 Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix.

 
 That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few 
 days when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've 
 fixed the two Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the 
 release after that, and I've also added a few more goodies. 
 
 Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the 
 library (where it probably should have been all along), and I'm 
 creating a Similar tab that will provide you with personalized music 
 suggestions based on the music that is already in your library. 
 
 Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and 
 thanks for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the 
 kinks.  I'm doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your 
 purchase. 
 
 -David 
 
 On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote: 
 
 Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the 
 Muxic 
 app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 
 
 
 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com
mailto:[mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com%20%3cjavascript:%3e] javascript:]
On Behalf 
 Of Wayne Merritt 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
 
 I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a 
 little 
 slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and 
 out of 
 the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly 
 full of 
 music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is

 slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the 
 processes return to their normal speed. 
 Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1? 
 
 Regards, 
 Wayne Merritt 
 
 On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com
mailto:da...@isamorton.com%20%3cjavascript: javascript: wrote: 
   Fred, 
   
   I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about 
   playlist 
   
   folders. 
   
   Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which 
 Apple 
   is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will 
change 
   soon

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-05 Thread Jesus Garcia
Now here is an APP developer who cares and is worth supporting. I for one
intend to purchase the APP tonight. thanks for all the work.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of David Morton
Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2012 08:36
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

I'm not entirely sure what's causing the sluggishness.  I never noticed it
myself, but then again, I'm not a VoiceOver user.  

 

What I can tell you guys, is that there's a TON of things going on
audio-wise behind the scenes in the app.  Not only is it validating timing
for crossfade, but it's also handling audio normalization, etc, etc.  I'm
wondering if VoiceOver is affected by the heavy use of the audio system. 

 

Here's a test... could someone run this for me?  Turn off Normalization
entirely, and let me know if you still have the same issue.  

 

Unfortunately, this is one of those that I'm not sure I'll be able to fix.  

 

That being said, the frequent crashes should be fixed in the next few days
when Apple pushes the latest version to the App Store.  I've fixed the two
Title sections at the top of the Queue page for the release after that,
and I've also added a few more goodies.  

 

Do be aware that in version 4.0, I'm moving the Stations tab to the library
(where it probably should have been all along), and I'm creating a Similar
tab that will provide you with personalized music suggestions based on the
music that is already in your library.  

 

Again, let me know if there's anything I can do for any of you, and thanks
for downloading and being patient as I work through some of the kinks.  I'm
doing my best to make sure all of you are happy with your purchase.  

 

-David


On Tuesday, September 4, 2012 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Jeffrey wrote:

Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the Muxic 
app. This does not happen when using the native Music app. 


-Original Message- 
From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.com
javascript: ] On Behalf 
Of Wayne Merritt 
Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM 
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a little 
slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and out of 
the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly full of 
music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is 
slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the 
processes return to their normal speed. 
Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1? 

Regards, 
Wayne Merritt 

On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com javascript:  wrote: 
 Fred, 
 
 I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about 
 playlist 
 
 folders. 
 
 Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
  Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple 
 is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change 
 soon, and 
 
 I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist 
 hierarchy intact. 
 
 -David 
 
 On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net wrote: 
 
  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or 
 maybe, making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and 
 attempt to go through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in 
 all of my other music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with 
 the app you are speaking about? 
 Fred Olver 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript: 
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM 
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
 
 Yes, that's correct. 
 
 Jonathan 
 
  -- 
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto: 
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller 
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m. 
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
 
  I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the 
 library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I 
 don't have the app. 
 
 
 
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto: 
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson 
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM 
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 
 
 
 
 Jonathan, 
 
 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone? 
 
 
 
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote: 
 
 
 
  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked 
 out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic 
 app is now 
 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the 
 dock

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread David Morton
Moop, 

There are one or two bugs that cause crashing, they should be solved in the 
next update.  

-David

On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:38:14 PM UTC-5, Moop wrote:

 Hi,
 This app is wonderful except for the fact that it closes on me whenever I 
 hit the shuffle button. And one time, when I did get it working, it just 
 quit in the middle of the song. Is anyone else having this problem, and 
 might reinstalling it help?
 Thanks,
 Courtney
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 8:35 PM, AnonyMouse wrote:

 Brett,
  
 That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only 
 Normalize your songs.
  
 So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?
  

 Regards,

 Anonymouse

 AppleVis Editorial Team

 www.AppleVis.com

 Twitter: 
 www.twitter.com\thomas_domvillehttp://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville

 Zello: =AnonyMouse=
  
  
  
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of*Brett
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out
  
 Hi, 
  
 I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If 
 not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 
  
 Thanks, Brett. 

 Sent from Brett's iPhone


 On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.orgjavascript: 
 wrote:

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock 
 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from 
 the App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
 features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features: 

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
 exist in your library. 

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace 
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 

 * Full song scrubbing. 

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

 * Full support for headphone controls. 

 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

 * Instructions built into the app. 

 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 

 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are 
 likely not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at

 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the VIPhone 
 Google Group.
 To search the VIPhone public archive, visit 
 http://www.mail-archive.com/viphone@googlegroups.com/.
 To post to this group, send email to vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 .
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email 
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 For more options, visit this group at
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 -- 
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 Google Group.
 To search the VIPhone public

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread David Morton
odin, 

Try this link:

http://bit.ly/MuxicApp

It should be a worldwide app.  

-David

On Wednesday, August 29, 2012 9:55:50 AM UTC-5, odin wrote:

 This app sounds very interesting but I can't find it in the Norwegian app 
 store 
 Jonathan: Since you have a dialog with the developer could you ask him to 
 consider adding Muxic to the Norwegian app store? 

 Thanks. 

 -Original Message- 
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf Of Brett 
 Sent: 29. august 2012 11:47 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

 Hi Anonymouse, 

   

 No, I hadn't tried that one until now and its not bad, but I still prefer 
 Stereophonic over this one. You can customize the sound a bit more and save 
 your presets, so you can have one to suit the sound signature of each pair 
 of headphones. 

   

 I did buy Muxic though and think it's a great app, I will now use this one 
 when connected to my doc or my home theatre system and think I will mainly 
 use Stereophonic when using headphones. As I am pretty fussy about my 
 sound, especially when listening through headphones when imperfections are 
 more apparent. Smile! Yes, I know I am fussy. 

   

 Cheers, 

 Brett. 

   

   

 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf Of AnonyMouse 
 Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 10:35 AM 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

   

 Brett, 

   

 That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only 
 Normalize your songs. 

   

 So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all? 

   

 Regards, 

 Anonymouse 

 AppleVis Editorial Team 

 www.AppleVis.com 

 Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville 
 http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

 Zello: =AnonyMouse= 

   

   

   

 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] On Behalf Of Brett 
 Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM 
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

   

 Hi, 

   

 I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If 
 not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 

   

 Thanks, Brett. 

 Sent from Brett's iPhone 


 On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.orgjavascript: 
 wrote: 

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't 
 checked out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic 
 app is now pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it 
 in the dock of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the 
 description from the App Store. 

  

 Music lovers love Muxic. 
  
 Why? 
  
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app 
 store. From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and 
 exploration features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend. 
  
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen. 
  
 Features: 
  
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, 
 without fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music 
 to give you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave. 
  
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading 
 fade-in, fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 
  
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music 
 louder. 
  
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
  
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists 
 that exist in your library. 
  
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons 
 of information about the artists in your library, including similar 
 artists, biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest). 
  
 * Tweet what you're listening to! 
  
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
  
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace 
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
  
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, 
 and what's coming up soon. 
  
 * Full song scrubbing. 
  
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
  
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
  
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
  
 * Instructions built into the app. 
  
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
  
 Fine print

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread David Morton
Fred,

I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about playlist 
folders.  

Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem. 
 Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple is 
always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change soon, and 
I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist hierarchy 
intact. 

-David

On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net wrote:

  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe, 
 making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to go 
 through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other 
 music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with the app you are 
 speaking about?
 Fred Olver
  

 - Original Message - 
 *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript: 
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: 
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 Yes, that's correct.
  
 Jonathan

  --
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

  I would assume you sync it normally, and it’ll just pull it from the 
 library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don’t 
 have the app.

  
  
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

  

 Jonathan,
  
 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?
  
  
  
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:



  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock 
 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from 
 the App Store.
  
  
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
 features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features: 

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
 exist in your library. 

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace 
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 

 * Full song scrubbing. 

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

 * Full support for headphone controls. 

 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

 * Instructions built into the app. 

 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 

 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are 
 likely not DRM-protected.
  
  
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
  
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
  
  
 You can find it at
  

 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread Wayne Merritt
I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a
little slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both
in and out of the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone
is nearly full of music and Audible books, but I still find it
interesting that Muxic is slowing things down, but when I close it out
of the app switcher, the processes return to their normal speed.
Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1?

Regards,
Wayne Merritt

On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:
 Fred,

 I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about playlist

 folders.

 Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem.
  Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple is
 always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change soon, and

 I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist hierarchy
 intact.

 -David

 On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net wrote:

  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe,
 making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to
 go
 through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other
 music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with the app you are
 speaking about?
 Fred Olver


 - Original Message -
 *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript:
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 Yes, that's correct.

 Jonathan

  --
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

  I would assume you sync it normally, and it’ll just pull it from the
 library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don’t
 have the app.



 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



 Jonathan,

 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?



 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:



  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now

 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock

 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description
 from
 the App Store.



 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store.
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration
 features, Muxic is the music fan's best
 friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features:

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without

 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give

 you that radio-style listening
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels.

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder.

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
 exist in your library.

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,

 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs.

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's

 coming up soon.

 * Full song scrubbing.

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen).

 * Full support for headphone controls.

 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users.

 * Instructions built into the app.

 * Ability to turn off crossfading.

 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected

 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization

 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are
 likely not DRM-protected.



 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing

 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.



 If you're familiar

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread Raul A. Gallegos
Hi, I am also seeing this on the iPhone 4S. I believe the developer of 
the app is on the list and so should see these messages.


I like the app very much though because when it works, it works awesome. 
I mainly like it for the normalizing feature.


--
Raul A. Gallegos
Today I bought two fish, I named them one and two, So if one died, I 
would still have two.

Home Page: http://raulgallegos.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rau47
Facebook: http://facebook.com/rau47

On 9/4/2012 9:38 AM, Wayne Merritt wrote:

I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a
little slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both
in and out of the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone
is nearly full of music and Audible books, but I still find it
interesting that Muxic is slowing things down, but when I close it out
of the app switcher, the processes return to their normal speed.
Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1?

Regards,
Wayne Merritt

On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:

Fred,

I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about playlist

folders.

Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem.
  Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple is
always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change soon, and

I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist hierarchy
intact.

-David

On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net wrote:


  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe,
making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to
go
through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other
music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with the app you are
speaking about?
Fred Olver


- Original Message -
*From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript:
*To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
*Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
*Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Yes, that's correct.

Jonathan

  --
*From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller
*Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
*To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
*Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

  I would assume you sync it normally, and it’ll just pull it from the
library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don’t
have the app.



*From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson
*Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
*To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
*Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



Jonathan,

Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?



On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:



  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now

pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock

of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description
from
the App Store.



Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store.
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration
features, Muxic is the music fan's best
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features:

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without

fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give

you that radio-style listening
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels.

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder.

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library.

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,

biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and
maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace
the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs.

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's

coming up soon.

* Full song scrubbing.

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen).

* Full support for headphone controls.

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users.

* Instructions built into the app.

* Ability to turn off crossfading.

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread Thom
I had a hard time finding it in the U.S. store too. I found the link through
a blog post

-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of David Morton
Sent: Sunday, September 02, 2012 7:48 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


odin,  

Try this link:

http://bit.ly/MuxicApp

It should be a worldwide app.  

-David

On Wednesday, August 29, 2012 9:55:50 AM UTC-5, odin wrote: 

This app sounds very interesting but I can't find it in the Norwegian app
store 
Jonathan: Since you have a dialog with the developer could you ask him to
consider adding Muxic to the Norwegian app store? 

Thanks. 

-Original Message- 
From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
javascript: com] On Behalf Of Brett 
Sent: 29. august 2012 11:47 
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

Hi Anonymouse, 

  

No, I hadn't tried that one until now and its not bad, but I still prefer
Stereophonic over this one. You can customize the sound a bit more and save
your presets, so you can have one to suit the sound signature of each pair
of headphones. 

  

I did buy Muxic though and think it's a great app, I will now use this one
when connected to my doc or my home theatre system and think I will mainly
use Stereophonic when using headphones. As I am pretty fussy about my sound,
especially when listening through headphones when imperfections are more
apparent. Smile! Yes, I know I am fussy. 

  

Cheers, 

Brett. 

  

  

From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
javascript: com] On Behalf Of AnonyMouse 
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 10:35 AM 
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

  

Brett, 

  

That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only
Normalize your songs. 

  

So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all? 

  

Regards, 

Anonymouse 

AppleVis Editorial Team 

www.AppleVis.com 

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville http://www.twitter.com/
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse= 

  

  

  

From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
javascript: com] On Behalf Of Brett 
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM 
To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out 

  

Hi, 

  

I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If
not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 

  

Thanks, Brett. 

Sent from Brett's iPhone 


On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org javascript:
 wrote: 

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked
out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is
now pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the
dock of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description
from the App Store. 

 

Music lovers love Muxic. 
 
Why? 
 
Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app
store. From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and
exploration features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend. 
 
If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen. 
 
Features: 
 
* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music,
without fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music
to give you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave. 
 
* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 
 
* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music
louder. 
 
* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists
that exist in your library. 
 
* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons
of information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest). 
 
* Tweet what you're listening to! 
 
* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and
maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace the
queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and
what's coming up soon. 
 
* Full song scrubbing. 
 
* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
* Full support for headphone controls

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread Wayne Merritt
If you searchf or: muxic music lover, it will be on the first screen
of results. I didn't find it by searching for Muxic either.

Regards,
Wayne

On 9/4/12, Thom thom3...@gmail.com wrote:
 I had a hard time finding it in the U.S. store too. I found the link
 through
 a blog post

 -Original Message-
 From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
 Of David Morton
 Sent: Sunday, September 02, 2012 7:48 AM
 To: viphone@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


 odin,

 Try this link:

 http://bit.ly/MuxicApp

 It should be a worldwide app.

 -David

 On Wednesday, August 29, 2012 9:55:50 AM UTC-5, odin wrote:

 This app sounds very interesting but I can't find it in the Norwegian app
 store
 Jonathan: Since you have a dialog with the developer could you ask him to
 consider adding Muxic to the Norwegian app store?

 Thanks.

 -Original Message-
 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
 javascript: com] On Behalf Of Brett
 Sent: 29. august 2012 11:47
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 Hi Anonymouse,



 No, I hadn't tried that one until now and its not bad, but I still prefer
 Stereophonic over this one. You can customize the sound a bit more and save
 your presets, so you can have one to suit the sound signature of each pair
 of headphones.



 I did buy Muxic though and think it's a great app, I will now use this one
 when connected to my doc or my home theatre system and think I will mainly
 use Stereophonic when using headphones. As I am pretty fussy about my
 sound,
 especially when listening through headphones when imperfections are more
 apparent. Smile! Yes, I know I am fussy.



 Cheers,

 Brett.





 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
 javascript: com] On Behalf Of AnonyMouse
 Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 10:35 AM
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



 Brett,



 That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only
 Normalize your songs.



 So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?



 Regards,

 Anonymouse

 AppleVis Editorial Team

 www.AppleVis.com

 Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville http://www.twitter.com/
 http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville thomas_domville

 Zello: =AnonyMouse=







 From: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:  [mailto:vip...@googlegroups.
 javascript: com] On Behalf Of Brett
 Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
 To: vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



 Hi,



 I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If
 not, I think I will stick to stereophonic.



 Thanks, Brett.

 Sent from Brett's iPhone


 On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org javascript:
 wrote:

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked
 out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is
 now pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the
 dock of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description
 from the App Store.



 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app
 store. From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and
 exploration features, Muxic is the music fan's best
 friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features:

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music,
 without fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music
 to give you that radio-style listening
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels.

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music
 louder.

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists
 that exist in your library.

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons
 of information about the artists in your library, including similar
 artists,
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace
 the
 queue, mix into the queue, or append to the
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs.

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and
 what's coming up soon.

 * Full song scrubbing.

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-09-04 Thread Jeffrey Turner
Yes, iFarkle is much more sluggish when I listen to music with the Muxic
app. This does not happen when using the native Music app.


-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Wayne Merritt
Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:39 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

I've noticed on my iPhone4 that when Muxic is open, Voiceover is a little
slower to respond and other things are slower to happen, both in and out of
the muxic app. Perhaps this is because my 32 GB iPhone is nearly full of
music and Audible books, but I still find it interesting that Muxic is
slowing things down, but when I close it out of the app switcher, the
processes return to their normal speed.
Anyone else seeing this on an iPhone4 running iOS 5.1.1?

Regards,
Wayne Merritt

On 9/2/12, David Morton da...@isamorton.com wrote:
 Fred,

 I do know exactly what you're talking about.  You're talking about 
 playlist

 folders.

 Here's the deal: I DID figure out how to solve this problem.
  Unfortunately, the only solution is an undocumented API, which Apple 
 is always reticent to let through.  Hopefully their docs will change 
 soon, and

 I'll be able to submit a fix that will have the proper playlist 
 hierarchy intact.

 -David

 On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:28:17 PM UTC-5, good...@charter.net wrote:

  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or 
 maybe, making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and 
 attempt to go through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in 
 all of my other music folders. Has this problem been oliviated with 
 the app you are speaking about?
 Fred Olver


 - Original Message -
 *From:* Jonathan Mosen javascript:
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 Yes, that's correct.

 Jonathan

  --
 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Daniel Miller
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

  I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the 
 library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I 
 don't have the app.



 *From:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *Stacey Robinson
 *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
 *To:* vip...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



 Jonathan,

 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?



 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:



  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked 
 out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic 
 app is now

 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the 
 dock

 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the 
 description from the App Store.



 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store.
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and 
 exploration features, Muxic is the music fan's best friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features:

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, 
 without

 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to 
 give

 you that radio-style listening
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels.

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder.

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists 
 that exist in your library.

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar 
 artists,

 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to 
 replace the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the queue 
 whenever you want to add a group of songs.

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and 
 what's

 coming up soon.

 * Full song scrubbing.

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen).

 * Full support for headphone controls.

 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users.

 * Instructions built into the app.

 * Ability to turn off crossfading.

 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, 
 DRM-protected

 music cannot be played

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-29 Thread Sieghard Weitzel
Hi Fred,

 

iTunes doesn't really care about folders, it uses the ID3 tags like artist,
album, song title etc. to sort and organize music, but you probably know
this. When I first switched from my Stream and Booksense to an iPod Touch I
initially felt it was counter intuitive as I was used to Manage my own
music by having folders for genres, e.g. Rock, Country, Jazz etc., then in
those I'd have subfolders for the artists and in those subfolders for the
albums. In the iTunes Media folder under Music you still have the artist
folders and subfolders for each album, but in iTunes itself this
organization is ignored. I found it most useful to use the As List view in
the View menu and also to enable Genre, Artist and Album in the
column browser sub menu which is also in the View menu of iTunes.

This way I can select a genre and see all artists and albums in that genre,
I can then select an artist and the list displays only those albums and
songs and I can select a particular album and suddenly my main list view
only contains the songs on that album. All of these are simple list views
which I can jump to with F6 or the tab key and then navigate with the arrow
key or first letter navigation.

After I made sure all my albums had the proper ID3 tags I now find this
extremely easy, fast and efficient. For even more customization you can
always make playlists.

 

 

Best regards,

Sieghard

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Fred Olver
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 6:57 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Okay, Jonathon, what I'm wanting to do is to only see the albums in a
folder, not all of them in my library.

 

Fred Olver

 

- Original Message - 

From: Jonathan Mosen mailto:jmo...@mosen.org  

To: viphone@googlegroups.com 

Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:37 PM

Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi Fred, sorry but I don't understand what you're doing and what results
you're getting?

 

Jonathan

 

  _  

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Fred Olver
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:29 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe,
making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to go
through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other music
folders. Has this problem been oliviated with the app you are speaking
about?

Fred Olver

 

- Original Message - 

From: Jonathan Mosen mailto:jmo...@mosen.org  

To: viphone@googlegroups.com 

Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM

Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Yes, that's correct.

 

Jonathan

 

  _  

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Daniel Miller
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the library
the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don't have the
app.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Stacey Robinson
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Jonathan,

Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

 

On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-29 Thread Brett
Hi Anonymouse,

 

No, I hadn't tried that one until now and its not bad, but I still prefer
Stereophonic over this one. You can customize the sound a bit more and save
your presets, so you can have one to suit the sound signature of each pair
of headphones. 

 

I did buy Muxic though and think it's a great app, I will now use this one
when connected to my doc or my home theatre system and think I will mainly
use Stereophonic when using headphones. As I am pretty fussy about my sound,
especially when listening through headphones when imperfections are more
apparent. Smile! Yes, I know I am fussy. 

 

Cheers,

Brett.

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of AnonyMouse
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 10:35 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Brett,

 

That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only
Normalize your songs.

 

So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?

 

Regards,

Anonymouse

AppleVis Editorial Team

www.AppleVis.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse=

 

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Brett
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi, 

 

I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If
not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 

 

Thanks, Brett. 

Sent from Brett's iPhone


On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-29 Thread Øyvind Lode - Forums
This app sounds very interesting but I can't find it in the Norwegian app store
Jonathan: Since you have a dialog with the developer could you ask him to 
consider adding Muxic to the Norwegian app store?

Thanks.

-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Brett
Sent: 29. august 2012 11:47
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Hi Anonymouse,

 

No, I hadn't tried that one until now and its not bad, but I still prefer 
Stereophonic over this one. You can customize the sound a bit more and save 
your presets, so you can have one to suit the sound signature of each pair of 
headphones. 

 

I did buy Muxic though and think it's a great app, I will now use this one when 
connected to my doc or my home theatre system and think I will mainly use 
Stereophonic when using headphones. As I am pretty fussy about my sound, 
especially when listening through headphones when imperfections are more 
apparent. Smile! Yes, I know I am fussy. 

 

Cheers,

Brett.

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
AnonyMouse
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 10:35 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Brett,

 

That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only 
Normalize your songs.

 

So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?

 

Regards,

Anonymouse

AppleVis Editorial Team

www.AppleVis.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville 
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse=

 

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Brett
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi, 

 

I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If not, 
I think I will stick to stereophonic. 

 

Thanks, Brett. 

Sent from Brett's iPhone


On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, 
without fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to 
give you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace the 
queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and 
what's coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, 
DRM-protected music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and 
normalization cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are 
likely not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another 
thing that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
phone, not in the cloud

RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Daniel Miller
Hi,

 

Also, does it support iTunes Match? If not, it's a deal breaker for me,
since I strictly rely on that service and don't clutter my 64GB phone with
music.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Bill Malyszka
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 12:46 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Sounds good. One question. Does it shuffle by album in addition to shuffle
by song? One huge missing feature in Apple's Music app.

 

Cheers,

 

..b

 

On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:





Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

 

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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread James Mannion
Well unfortunately for your situation, it was stated in Jonathan's
message Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears
another thing that should
be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your phone, not
in the cloud
through iTunes Match.

On 8/28/12, Daniel Miller miller...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi,



 Also, does it support iTunes Match? If not, it's a deal breaker for me,
 since I strictly rely on that service and don't clutter my 64GB phone with
 music.



 From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
 Of Bill Malyszka
 Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 12:46 PM
 To: viphone@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



 Sounds good. One question. Does it shuffle by album in addition to shuffle
 by song? One huge missing feature in Apple's Music app.



 Cheers,



 ..b



 On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:





 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
 the App Store.



 Music lovers love Muxic.

 Why?

 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store.
 From
 crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration
 features,
 Muxic is the music fan's best
 friend.

 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

 Features:

 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
 you that radio-style listening
 experience you crave.

 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels.

 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder.

 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
 exist in your library.

 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

 * Tweet what you're listening to!

 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and
 maintenance,
 including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
 into the queue, or append to the
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs.

 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
 coming up soon.

 * Full song scrubbing.

 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen).

 * Full support for headphone controls.

 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users.

 * Instructions built into the app.

 * Ability to turn off crossfading.

 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
 not DRM-protected.



 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.



 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.



 You can find it at

 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
 8



 Jonathan



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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Sieghard Weitzel
Hi Daniel,

 

You must have missed the following line in Jonathan's message:

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

In other words, it apparently does not work with iTunes Match. On another
note, I personally decided to spend the extra money to get a 64 Gb phone so
I can have all my music on it and still have lots of space for other stuff.
I have just under 4,000 songs on the phone in 256 K quality and that takes
up about 25 Gig. I know others have tens of thousands of songs and maybe
then you can't fit it all on your phone, but what are you using the space
for if not for music? I have maybe 80 apps on the phone, but that's pretty
minor compared to what music and audio books take up and I may have anywhere
from 1 or 2 up to 6 or 8 Audible books downloaded at a time which could be 5
or 6 Gig, in any case, I always seem to have 20 or 25 Gig of free space even
with all my music, a bunch of books and some pictures.

 

 

Regards,

Sieghard

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Daniel Miller
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 11:00 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi,

 

Also, does it support iTunes Match? If not, it's a deal breaker for me,
since I strictly rely on that service and don't clutter my 64GB phone with
music.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Bill Malyszka
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 12:46 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Sounds good. One question. Does it shuffle by album in addition to shuffle
by song? One huge missing feature in Apple's Music app.

 

Cheers,

 

..b

 

On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:

 

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Moop Curran
Hi,
I love this app, but I have one question, can I adjust the gap between songs to 
none?
Thanks,
Courtney

On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
 my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
 App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From 
 crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features, 
 Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, fade-out, 
 volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that exist 
 in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance, 
 including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix 
 into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
 not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 
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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Daniel Miller
Hi,

 

I did miss that part, yes. I'll stick with apples stock music app, then.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Moop Curran
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 1:16 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi,

I love this app, but I have one question, can I adjust the gap between songs
to none?

Thanks,

Courtney

On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:





Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

 

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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Stacey Robinson
Jonathan,
Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
 my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
 App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From 
 crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features, 
 Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, fade-out, 
 volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that exist 
 in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance, 
 including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix 
 into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
 not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the VIPhone Google 
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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Fred Olver
Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe, making 
use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to go through it 
by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other music folders. Has 
this problem been oliviated with the app you are speaking about?

Fred Olver

  - Original Message - 
  From: Jonathan Mosen 
  To: viphone@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
  Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


  Yes, that's correct.

  Jonathan



--
  From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Daniel Miller
  Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
  To: viphone@googlegroups.com
  Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


  I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the library 
the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don't have the app.

   

  From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Stacey Robinson
  Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
  To: viphone@googlegroups.com
  Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

   

  Jonathan,

  Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

   

  On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:





  Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
App Store.

   

  Music lovers love Muxic.

  Why?

  Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From 
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features, 
Muxic is the music fan's best 
  friend.

  If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

  Features: 

  * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give you 
that radio-style listening 
  experience you crave.

  * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, fade-out, 
volume and normalization levels. 

  * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

  * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

  * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that exist 
in your library. 

  * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

  * Tweet what you're listening to!

  * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

  * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance, 
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix into 
the queue, or append to the 
  queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

  * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
coming up soon. 

  * Full song scrubbing. 

  * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

  * Full support for headphone controls. 

  * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

  * Instructions built into the app. 

  * Ability to turn off crossfading. 

  Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
  as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
not DRM-protected.

   

  Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your phone, 
not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

   

  If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next song 
based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also excellent, 
it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

   

  You can find it at

  http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8

   

  Jonathan

   

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http://groups.google.com/group/viphone?hl=en.
   
   

   

   

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Group

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Shane
Hi Stacy. i think you still may need to use itunes or a good alternative 
for syncing music between the phone and your computer. I might be wrong 
on this though, but I think the Muxic app is only for playing existing 
music in your library, or it looks like it might play some stations. 
Haven't played with that part of it yet.


Shane
On 8/28/2012 3:08 PM, Stacey Robinson wrote:

Jonathan,
Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked 
out Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic 
app is now pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've 
put it in the dock of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. 
Here's the description from the App Store.

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app 
store. From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and 
exploration features, Muxic is the music fan's best

friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features:

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, 
without fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your 
music to give you that radio-style listening

experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
fade-out, volume and normalization levels.


* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder.

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music.

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists 
that exist in your library.


* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
information about the artists in your library, including similar 
artists, biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).


* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens.

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to 
replace the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the

queue whenever you want to add a group of songs.

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and 
what's coming up soon.


* Full song scrubbing.

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen).

* Full support for headphone controls.

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users.

* Instructions built into the app.

* Ability to turn off crossfading.

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, 
DRM-protected music cannot be played through Muxic, as the 
crossfading and normalization cannot be applied. MP3s, as well
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are 
likely not DRM-protected.
Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another 
thing that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be 
on your phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many 
of us have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, 
very impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to 
play the next song based on the volume of the finishing one. The 
normalisation is also excellent, it sounds like it is using a little 
dynamic compression.

You can find it at
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
Jonathan

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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Stacey Robinson
Shane,
How much does this app cost. I didn't see a price when I followed Jonathan's 
link.

On Aug 28, 2012, at 4:19 PM, Shane wrote:

 Hi Stacy. i think you still may need to use itunes or a good alternative for 
 syncing music between the phone and your computer. I might be wrong on this 
 though, but I think the Muxic app is only for playing existing music in your 
 library, or it looks like it might play some stations. Haven't played with 
 that part of it yet.
 
 Shane
 On 8/28/2012 3:08 PM, Stacey Robinson wrote:
 Jonathan,
 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?
 
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:
 
 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock 
 of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from 
 the App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
 features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
 exist in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace 
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
 not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 
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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Stacey Robinson
Yes, that's a great price.
Think I'll add it to my ever growing wishlist.

On Aug 28, 2012, at 6:58 PM, Shane wrote:

 $0.99. Quite a great price for such a powerful app.
 
 Shane
 On 8/28/2012 5:22 PM, Stacey Robinson wrote:
 Shane,
 How much does this app cost. I didn't see a price when I followed Jonathan's 
 link.
 
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 4:19 PM, Shane wrote:
 
 Hi Stacy. i think you still may need to use itunes or a good alternative 
 for syncing music between the phone and your computer. I might be wrong on 
 this though, but I think the Muxic app is only for playing existing music 
 in your library, or it looks like it might play some stations. Haven't 
 played with that part of it yet.
 
 Shane
 On 8/28/2012 3:08 PM, Stacey Robinson wrote:
 Jonathan,
 Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?
 
 On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:
 
 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the 
 dock of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the 
 description from the App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
 From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
 features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to 
 give you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
 fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
 exist in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
 maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace 
 the queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and 
 what's coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, 
 DRM-protected music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading 
 and normalization cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are 
 likely not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the 
 next song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is 
 also excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 
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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread AnonyMouse
Courtney,

 

In the Settings tab you have the option to do the following two things.

 

You can turn off the Cross Fading and/or you can adjust the Time Between
Songs. Just use the adjustment to the spacing that you want.

 

HTH

 

Regards,

Anonymouse

AppleVis Editorial Team

www.AppleVis.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse=

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Moop Curran
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 1:16 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi,

I love this app, but I have one question, can I adjust the gap between songs
to none?

Thanks,

Courtney

On Aug 28, 2012, at 12:49 PM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:





Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

 

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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread AnonyMouse
Johnathan,

 

I'm in total agreement with you on this. I just tried this out last night. I
love it so much I've done the same thing. It is now my dock as well.

 

I really love the fact how it takes all of your music and categorize it all
by itself to create the Stations. That is something I have never seen
before. The creation of making your own Que is also remarkable.

 

For $0.99 this is a must have. If you want a great music player.

 

Regards,

Anonymouse

AppleVis Editorial Team

www.AppleVis.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse=

 

 

 

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Jonathan Mosen
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 11:50 AM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Jonathan Mosen
Hi Fred, sorry but I don't understand what you're doing and what results
you're getting?
 
Jonathan

  _  

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Fred Olver
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:29 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe,
making use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to go
through it by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other music
folders. Has this problem been oliviated with the app you are speaking
about?

Fred Olver
 

- Original Message - 
From: Jonathan Mosen mailto:jmo...@mosen.org  
To: viphone@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

Yes, that's correct.
 
Jonathan

  _  

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Daniel Miller
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out



I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the library
the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don't have the
app.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Stacey Robinson
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Jonathan,

Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

 

On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:





Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.

 

You can find it at

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8

 

Jonathan

 

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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Moop Curran
Hi,
This app is wonderful except for the fact that it closes on me whenever I hit 
the shuffle button. And one time, when I did get it working, it just quit in 
the middle of the song. Is anyone else having this problem, and might 
reinstalling it help?
Thanks,
Courtney
On Aug 28, 2012, at 8:35 PM, AnonyMouse wrote:

 Brett,
  
 That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only 
 Normalize your songs.
  
 So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?
  
 Regards,
 
 Anonymouse
 
 AppleVis Editorial Team
 
 www.AppleVis.com
 
 Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville
 
 Zello: =AnonyMouse=
 
  
  
  
 From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
 OfBrett
 Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
 To: viphone@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out
  
 Hi, 
  
 I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If 
 not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 
  
 Thanks, Brett. 
 
 Sent from Brett's iPhone
 
 On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:
 
 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
 my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
 App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From 
 crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features, 
 Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, fade-out, 
 volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that exist 
 in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance, 
 including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix 
 into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
 not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 -- 
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RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Jonathan Mosen
Hi Courtney, I've seen this happen too today, on very large playlists. The
developer is great at responding on Twitter, so I'll ask him about it.
 
Jonathan

  _  

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Moop Curran
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 12:38 p.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


Hi, 
This app is wonderful except for the fact that it closes on me whenever I
hit the shuffle button. And one time, when I did get it working, it just
quit in the middle of the song. Is anyone else having this problem, and
might reinstalling it help?
Thanks,
Courtney

On Aug 28, 2012, at 8:35 PM, AnonyMouse wrote:



Brett,

That is correct. There are no equalizer in this music player. You can only
Normalize your songs.

So I am curious. Have you tried Audio Xicter at all?


Regards,

Anonymouse

AppleVis Editorial Team

www.AppleVis.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com\thomas_domville
http://www.twitter.com/thomas_domville 

Zello: =AnonyMouse=




From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
OfBrett
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:25 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out
Hi, 
I take it this app doesn't let you manually adjust equaliser settings? If
not, I think I will stick to stereophonic. 
Thanks, Brett. 

Sent from Brett's iPhone


On 29/08/2012, at 2:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:

Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock
of my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from
the App Store.
Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From
crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features,
Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give
you that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in,
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists,
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance,
including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix
into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely
not DRM-protected.
Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your
phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next
song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also
excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
You can find it at
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=
8
Jonathan
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Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Fred Olver
Okay, Jonathon, what I'm wanting to do is to only see the albums in a folder, 
not all of them in my library.

Fred Olver

  - Original Message - 
  From: Jonathan Mosen 
  To: viphone@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 7:37 PM
  Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


  Hi Fred, sorry but I don't understand what you're doing and what results 
you're getting?

  Jonathan



--
  From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Fred Olver
  Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:29 a.m.
  To: viphone@googlegroups.com
  Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


  Jonathon, one of the things I have experienced with I-tunes, or maybe, making 
use of it, is that when I create a folder of music and attempt to go through it 
by artist, I also see all of the artists in all of my other music folders. Has 
this problem been oliviated with the app you are speaking about?

  Fred Olver

- Original Message - 
From: Jonathan Mosen 
To: viphone@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:15 PM
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


Yes, that's correct.

Jonathan




From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
Of Daniel Miller
Sent: Wednesday, 29 August 2012 8:09 a.m.
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out


I would assume you sync it normally, and it'll just pull it from the 
library the normal music app uses. I could be wrong though since I don't have 
the app.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
Of Stacey Robinson
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 3:08 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

 

Jonathan,

Using this app, how do you sync music to your phone?

 

On Aug 28, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen wrote:





Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
App Store.

 

Music lovers love Muxic.

Why?

Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. 
From crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration 
features, Muxic is the music fan's best 
friend.

If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.

Features: 

* Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give you 
that radio-style listening 
experience you crave.

* Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, 
fade-out, volume and normalization levels. 

* Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 

* Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 

* Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that 
exist in your library. 

* Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).

* Tweet what you're listening to!

* Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 

* Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and 
maintenance, including the ability to select whether you want to replace the 
queue, mix into the queue, or append to the 
queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 

* Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
coming up soon. 

* Full song scrubbing. 

* Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 

* Full support for headphone controls. 

* Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 

* Instructions built into the app. 

* Ability to turn off crossfading. 

Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
not DRM-protected.

 

Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your phone, 
not in the cloud through iTunes Match.

 

If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next

Re: Muxic is an App Worth Checking Out

2012-08-28 Thread Robert Fenton
Hello Jonathan:

I agree with you that the app looks good. However, for those people who are 
using iTunes match, the app will not play songs properly from your library. I 
thought I better pass this along.

Sent from my iPhone

On 2012-08-28, at 10:49 AM, Jonathan Mosen jmo...@mosen.org wrote:

 Hi all, for those who don't follow me on Twitter or haven't checked out 
 Applevis recently where Drew Webber posted a review, the Muxic app is now 
 pretty accessible. I'm so impressed with this that I've put it in the dock of 
 my 4S, replacing Apple's built-in Music App. Here's the description from the 
 App Store.
  
 Music lovers love Muxic.
 
 Why?
 
 Muxic gives you the most features of any music player on the app store. From 
 crossfading to volume normalization to artist info and exploration features, 
 Muxic is the music fan's best 
 friend.
 
 If you're passionate about music, Muxic is the only way to listen.
 
 Features: 
 
 * Intelligent Crossfading eliminates the gaps between your music, without 
 fading out too early or fading in too late. It analyzes your music to give 
 you that radio-style listening 
 experience you crave.
 
 * Per-song customization to further refine the crossfading fade-in, fade-out, 
 volume and normalization levels. 
 
 * Volume normalization options that can make your quiet music louder. 
 
 * Genre stations for quick mixes of similar music. 
 
 * Similar artist stations makes playlists based on similar artists that exist 
 in your library. 
 
 * Learn about your music with the artist info screen that has tons of 
 information about the artists in your library, including similar artists, 
 biographies, and more! (Data provided by The Echo Nest).
 
 * Tweet what you're listening to!
 
 * Gesture-enabled playlist, library and now playing screens. 
 
 * Advanced playlist capabilities for easy playlist creation and maintenance, 
 including the ability to select whether you want to replace the queue, mix 
 into the queue, or append to the 
 queue whenever you want to add a group of songs. 
 
 * Informative lock screen image to show you what's playing now, and what's 
 coming up soon. 
 
 * Full song scrubbing. 
 
 * Airplay enabled (via the lock screen). 
 
 * Full support for headphone controls. 
 
 * Full accessibility features for visually-impaired users. 
 
 * Instructions built into the app. 
 
 * Ability to turn off crossfading. 
 
 Fine print: As is the case with most other crossfading apps, DRM-protected 
 music cannot be played through Muxic, as the crossfading and normalization 
 cannot be applied. MP3s, as well 
 as most recent purchases from iTunes in the past couple of years are likely 
 not DRM-protected.
  
 Just adding my own comments to that description, it appears another thing 
 that should be added to the fine print is that songs need to be on your 
 phone, not in the cloud through iTunes Match.
  
 If you're familiar with Winamp and the SQR crossfading plug-in many of us 
 have been using for over a decade, it's almost as good as that, very 
 impressive. It is making intelligent decisions about when to play the next 
 song based on the volume of the finishing one. The normalisation is also 
 excellent, it sounds like it is using a little dynamic compression.
  
 You can find it at
 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/muxic-intelligent-crossfading/id547091143?mt=8
  
 Jonathan
 -- 
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