Apesbrain wrote:
> Glad this worked out for you, but there is no reason for anyone to
> expect the introduction of a 5G wireless router will improve the sound
> quality of their Squeezeboxes. You might believe you hear a "bigger
> sound stage and more depth", but I suggest this is due to your
>
It might turn a 1 into a 1.1 and a 0 into 0.1 - you never know
*Pi3 with piCoreplayer music on QNAP TS419p via NFS*
iThingys/iPeng/Tablets/Jogglers
*Living Room* - Joggler & SB3 -> Onkyo TS606 - > Celestion Ditton F20s
*Office* - Pi -> Sony TA FE320 -> Celestion F10s / Pi & SB3 -> Onkyo
openhab home automation has a component to do this. It's a lot of work
to set up just for this. Just thought I'd mention it.
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Actually think the internet would be a saner place if all texts
containing "s*und st*ge" would be quietly sent to /dev/null.
I mean, is it really a thing? Is it ever used in any meaningful
context?
And if someone actually believed the stuff, hooking up the server to 5
GHz isn't "putting out more
Recoveryone wrote:
> The unintentional bonus using the 5 G on the server was a bigger sound
> stage and more depth in my music. After thinking on this, it makes good
> sense as the 5 G is putting out more bandwidth to my squeezebox touches.
> We all known being hardwire is best, put like most my
Greg Erskine wrote:
> I didn't think anyone used the CPU temperature graphing. :)
>
> The [Start] button starts a small script that writes the CPU temperature
> to a log file every minute.
>
> The [Refresh] button reads the temperature log file to generate a SVG
> graphic that is then displayed