A few newbie questions

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6 comments

  • Official comment
    ALI NAQVI

    Hi John, 

    Welcome to the Bluesound family! I had the same sort of Qs when I joined the Bluesound world. Hopefully Bluesound, or someone with much more knowledge than myself, will respond to your questions but basically my understanding is that your phone is purely the remote control and nothing else. Just like your TV remote is for your telly, so no impact on your phone other than when you're turning the volume down or changing inputs/tracks etc. 

    Not being an iPhone user I can't answer your Q on the internal speaker. 

    Happy streaming!

    Ali

  • John Strzykalski

    Hi Ali

    Thank you for your reply.  I fully charged my phone overnight.  Today I will keep a close eye on the battery usage.  

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  • John Strzykalski

    Hi Seppi,  you correct  Started off with a fully charged iPhone this morning.  Did not use the phone much for anything else  After 13 hours of steaming I still have about 40% battery lie left  I can  live with that.  Was worried it would be worse.

    I was using an Audio Engine B1, before I bought the Node.  My Node is in my living room. I wanted to stream music in my workshop in the basement.  The B1 is a Bluetooth receiver.  I took it down to my shop and I was able to pair it up with the Node.  The I plugged it into a little receiver I have there, and it I had non stop streaming all day.  Worked great!!!

    Thanks for your reply

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  • ALI NAQVI

    The above string got me thinking which hopefully Seppi or Bluesound can answer....

    My Q is if you have downloaded a high resolution playlist to your phone, from say Tidal or another streaming platform, does the BLUESOUND player then play the music from your phone at that bit rate (if that's the right expression?) or is it playing it a lower quality because it is being streamed from the internet, not the phone? I can't quite get my head around the fact that if the phone is just the remote control (but the music is downloaded on your phone) how it can then play it from the internet at that same quality ie. it's physically downloaded to your phone? 

    This is quite difficult to explain so hopefully I'm making myself clear?

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  • ALI NAQVI

    Thanks Seppi. It does make sense. So the Tidal app tells the Tidal Server to play the track at it's full quality  (assuming that's the audio quality you have selected in in the settings) regardless of whether it's downloaded or not?

    Is that the same for Spotify playlists that I've downloaded to my phone? Although I know Spotify's bitrate isn't as high at 320kbps, I think. 

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  • ALI NAQVI

    Fab - thanks!

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