I listen to music stored on my computer using Audigy and iTunes, and I have my entire collection encoded in ALAC format. In the player and audio card settings, I have 24 bit/48 kHz, and the sound quality is particularly impressive when these parameters are used. The voices and the guitars and the bass and the drums do not blend together when listening through the headphones, therefore the details of each instrument's sound are preserved quite well. What caused such an effect to be attained is a mystery to me; I can't even venture a guess; yet, it seems as though my speaker has its own frequency. I disabled the Bass Boost feature in the graphics card's settings because I deemed it to be superfluous. In the album by the same name released by the band of the same name, I even had to turn down the bass volume because "oh, what did it mumble like that?" (c) I purchased it from Amazon, and they took it off display in the showroom; the assembly was in Ireland. I have high hopes that they will have a longer lifespan than the previous Chinese-made HD215s, which started to cough, whistle, and crackle after about a year and a half of use: (
Global Version HUAWEI Band 6 Fitness Tracker Smartwatch for Men and Women, 1.47ββ AMOLED Color Screen, All-Day SpO2 and Heart Rate Monitoring, 2-Week Battery Life, 5ATM Waterproof - Orange
190 Review
SAMSUNG Galaxy Watch Active2 (Aqua Black, R820-44mm) π± with Bluetooth, Silicon Strap, and Aluminum Bezel - International
248 Review
Black Audio-Technica ATH-M50X Professional Grade Studio Monitor Headphones with Detachable Cable - Critically Acclaimed
200 Review
SAMSUNG Galaxy Watch (46Mm
259 Review