Are you hearing everything?
26 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
- DickK
- ProShow Hall of Fame
- Posts: 3143
- Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 7:42 pm
- Location: Northern Virginia
Re: Are you hearing everything?
For my desktop I've got a sub/sat combination (self-powered) hooked up to the sound card on one output and a line from another output connected to the AUX input on a amp/receiver and some bookshelf speakers. Most of the time it's configured as a 4.1 and that works quite well. Lots of ways to get there.
Dick
Dick
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." Aristotle ((PSG, PSE & Fuji HS20 user)) Presentation Impact Blog
Re: Are you hearing everything?
Dick, I haven't the foggiest notion of what you just said!
Barbara
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Are you hearing everything?
Hi Barbara,
Sometimes we have everything we need, the trick is to find it. Your fix did not cost you a penny. I THINK YOU HAVE A VERY GOOD SON
Enjoy your music,
Amicalement, Jean-Paul
Sometimes we have everything we need, the trick is to find it. Your fix did not cost you a penny. I THINK YOU HAVE A VERY GOOD SON
Enjoy your music,
Amicalement, Jean-Paul
This forum is to ProShow enthusiasts, what hair is to the gorilla
PSP v5 (last releas) PC: Win. 7 x64, CPU Intel i7, Memory RAM 12 GB, Disk partition (C:) SSD, GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 285, Monitor 23” HD, GPU Benchmark for PSP 372.
- Dean Athans
- Posts: 204
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 5:55 pm
- Location: Southern California
Re: Are you hearing everything?
Barbara -
Thanks for the heads up concerning the sound--the monitored sound while editing vs the presentation sound. One factor you neglected to address was the "selective hearing" component, which depends heavily on whether my wife is talking to me or not!
As for the computer sound, my most recent computer setup includes a sound-bar, which I have found to give surprisingly better sound than the muffled sounding mid-range speakers I had before that. The final arbiter is when playing the completed DVD through our television with the sound routed through our Denon-JBL sound system. It really improves on the computer sound, but I'm sure my aging ears are still missing a lot!
As for the improving vision thing, yes, the same was told to me at my last vision exam. My latest glasses have less long-range correction now than my last pairs did! However, an additional twist is that I have cataracts, which will eventually require surgery. My concern is that I am used to doing my close-up work (e.g., at the computer) without glasses and driving, viewing movies, etc., with glasses. I have to make sure that my vision after the surgery will be the same--close-up without glasses, long-distance with, which is the opposite of what most patients are corrected to.
- Dean A.
Thanks for the heads up concerning the sound--the monitored sound while editing vs the presentation sound. One factor you neglected to address was the "selective hearing" component, which depends heavily on whether my wife is talking to me or not!
As for the computer sound, my most recent computer setup includes a sound-bar, which I have found to give surprisingly better sound than the muffled sounding mid-range speakers I had before that. The final arbiter is when playing the completed DVD through our television with the sound routed through our Denon-JBL sound system. It really improves on the computer sound, but I'm sure my aging ears are still missing a lot!
As for the improving vision thing, yes, the same was told to me at my last vision exam. My latest glasses have less long-range correction now than my last pairs did! However, an additional twist is that I have cataracts, which will eventually require surgery. My concern is that I am used to doing my close-up work (e.g., at the computer) without glasses and driving, viewing movies, etc., with glasses. I have to make sure that my vision after the surgery will be the same--close-up without glasses, long-distance with, which is the opposite of what most patients are corrected to.
- Dean A.
Dean A
Re: Are you hearing everything?
Dean, you and I are a matched set. Not only did I need weaker glasses, but I was also told I was just beginning to develop cataracts. Not enough yet for surgery. My mother had cataracts removed and her vision improved enormously, though she thought it smart to wander around her house immediately following surgery and tried to walk through a sliding glass door. No harm done except to her dignity.
Barbara
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Are you hearing everything?
A funny story about cataracts - my friend's mother needed the surgery but kept putting it off. In the meantime, she wanted the living room painted. She picked out the color yellow that she wanted and even though both of her daughters tried to talk her out of it, she insisted that was what she wanted. Well, after she had the surgery, she then wanted to know why no one told her how bright the color was!
Re: Are you hearing everything?
I assume the living room was toned down very quickly.
Barbara
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Are you hearing everything?
I had cataract surgery 2 years ago. I was shocked
at how bright colors were. Al the way home from
surgery, I was wow, oohing & ahing, it was
amazing. You loose the sight so slowly you don't
realize what you are missing. The interoccular
lens is a wonderfull thing. I remember when
cataract's were Bad! Bad! Bad!
at how bright colors were. Al the way home from
surgery, I was wow, oohing & ahing, it was
amazing. You loose the sight so slowly you don't
realize what you are missing. The interoccular
lens is a wonderfull thing. I remember when
cataract's were Bad! Bad! Bad!
Re: Are you hearing everything?
My husband will have to have the surgery sooner rather than later, and he's looking forward to it. There's little in the way of surgery that people actually look forward to.
Barbara
P.S. Isn't it wonderful how a conversation starts with one thing, goes to another and yet another? Before you know it, we'll be discussing Custer's Last Stand.
Barbara
P.S. Isn't it wonderful how a conversation starts with one thing, goes to another and yet another? Before you know it, we'll be discussing Custer's Last Stand.
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Are you hearing everything?
Custer would have won if he didn't have Cataract's.
Canon EOS 50D,PSE7,Latest Producer, new computer...don't know specs off hand but runs Producer with no problems.
Re: Are you hearing everything?
By cracky, Don, I believe you're right!
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
26 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 29 guests