archy121
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And bingo Apple have you hooked for life
..OR Bingo Google own your life
And bingo Apple have you hooked for life
I was getting all excited about switching. But then realised that Apple Watch is too much part of my lifestyle to loose it.
..OR Bingo Google own your life
apologies if this has been covered before
But can anyone recommend or even tell me where to find a decent OTG capable cable that's terminated in a type b connection(the other side being type c, of course)? I can't seem to find anything with enough description for its use with a DAC. Only one, in fact.
To make a long story shorter:
I wanna use my Schiit Fulla with my V30, just for ****s and giggles really. I'd rather not have to use bulky adapters. I have UAPP.
Please help... Lol
Thanks in advance
I'd have to mess with the phone? I thought that was the main purpose of UAPP; that it allowed for OTG USB output?
Maybe I've been misunderstanding something fundamental in this thread... I thought I've seen it mentioned that UAPP specifically supported use of a Dragonfly, so I assumed that meant that most other OTG reliant DACs would also work.
If you're doing any DSP in Neutron (EQ, crossfeed, etc.) then 64 bit and dithering can be helpful. Otherwise they make no difference and you don't need them.And what about this 64 bit processing? Turn it on or not? I'm clueless!
Through the internal DAC, yes. I'm not sure Qobuz outputs correctly via USB unless you use UAPP instead of the official app.
On my LG G7 One, the Qobuz and Tidal apps send USB output via the Android OS where it gets resampled to 48 kHz. UAPP has no such problem.
This can only be fully tested if you have an external DAC that displays the sample rate.
Are you sure this is the case (if I am outputting direct to HP from the V30)? There are others earlier in this thread (admittedly older posts) that state the opposite.
Does Qobuz either;
- do equivalent to the Tidal app (i.e. correctly outputs the Hi-Res material, but upsamples the non Hi-Res material)
- put all material whether Hi-Res or not through the Android DAC and upsample it in some way
- something else...?
Apologies for the probably daft question but I'm trying to figure out whether it is worth my time downloading a load of Hi-Res stuff offline in the Qobuz app if the only way I can get the music to output properly is through streaming via UAPP.... Basically end goal of saving myself mobile data whilst I'm out and about without sacrificing sound quality.... I'm assuming for the non Hi-Res stuff the Qobuz app upsamples same as Tidal, hence would only use UAPP for this material
Are you sure this is the case (if I am outputting direct to HP from the V30)? There are others earlier in this thread (admittedly older posts) that state the opposite.
Does Qobuz either;
- do equivalent to the Tidal app (i.e. correctly outputs the Hi-Res material, but upsamples the non Hi-Res material)
- put all material whether Hi-Res or not through the Android DAC and upsample it in some way
- something else...?
Apologies for the probably daft question but I'm trying to figure out whether it is worth my time downloading a load of Hi-Res stuff offline in the Qobuz app if the only way I can get the music to output properly is through streaming via UAPP.... Basically end goal of saving myself mobile data whilst I'm out and about without sacrificing sound quality.... I'm assuming for the non Hi-Res stuff the Qobuz app upsamples same as Tidal, hence would only use UAPP for this material
USB:
I tested this using a DAC that shows the sample rate as a number on its display. When the Qobuz app plays via USB to an external DAC, all tracks of any resolution are resampled to 48 kHz. The Tidal app does this as well. The UAPP app bypasses this problem. I use UAPP for both services.
Internal:
When the Qobuz app plays through the internal quad DAC it appears to work correctly at all resolutions, but I have not done extensive listening and I do not have the test setup that @Dannemand used to report here [link] that the Tidal app only does that correctly with MQA while allowing other tracks to get resampled to 48 kHz by the OS. With UAPP you don't have to worry about this either.