![]() If there is a manual track change where the first track is somewhere in the middle of the song at track change time, the old track will fade out, then a little silence will be heard, then the new track will begin. If the first track finishes naturally, there will be a small gap between tracks. Provides a smooth transition when switching between tracks without any overlap of the two tracks. Useful on classical and other recordings where track boundaries don't always occur during silence. The first track is faded out and the new track is faded in. For a manual track change where the first track is somewhere in the middle of the song at track change time, the old track is faded out and the new track is played at full volume. It makes track changes smooth - much like the transitions used in clubs and on radio stations.įor transitions between tracks when the first track reaches the end, both tracks are played at full volume (no fade) and the natural fade present in the music is heard. This blends the end of one track with the beginning of the next track. ![]() This setting describes how the program sounds when it changes tracks.Īdds the specified amount of silence between tracks. The memory buffer is capped at one gigabyte, and rolls as needed for extremely large files. This option loads an entire file into memory so that the disk is not accessed during playback. Play files from memory instead of disk (not zone-specific) This silence will not be played between tracks with the same sample rate. Note that this option is only in effect in two cases - at the first playback after the program starts, and between tracks with different sample rates. This option allows outputting leading silence so no actual sound is lost in these cases. Some hardware requires a lead time from when a signal is delivered to when sound is produced. Play silence at startup for hardware synchronization If you are on a slow network or use some other spotty source, you might increase this from the default of 6 seconds. This is the amount of decoded audio data that is retrieved ahead of playback. Opens the DSP Studio box, where you can set equalizer, effects, replay gain and output format settings for your output. ![]() You can also select from a variety of Audio Output Modes, and set special Device Settings for hardware compatibility. This is where you select the Audio Device that you'd like Media Center to use for the selected Zone. ![]()
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