Q. hi, I want a jukebox that plays music from my phone and iPad, not a real jukebox :p I have seen them on best buy and stuff but they're all not really my taste because either the colors or they're too cheesy. anyone know where I can get one or just a vintage style radio??
preferably without an alarm clock but I don't really care. :)
also WITH GOOD SPEAKERS that don't blow easily because I like to have my music loud
A. If you want a loud and clear stereo forget about any type of jukebox. You are much better off buying a real stereo and then buy a jukebox for the decoration.
I just looked at some on amazon (I searched "jukebox" and found many) - I found some with ipod dock but none with AUX input - maybe you will have better luck.
Is the Kindle fire as good as the ipad?
Q. I want to get a Kindle fire sometime and since it is only like $150 at this time then I want to get one so bad because the ipad is too overpriced. But it sht Kindle fire really as good as the ipad? What are the differences between the 2 and which one is better recommended?
A. Someone like you,
The Kindle Fire is an e-reader. It's specialty is presenting books to read electronically. For this it is an excellent choice. In fact, it is probably one of the best, if not the best e-reader currently on the market. Kindle's Fire is the electronic gateway to Amazon's media content. The device is an excellent buy, it is reported that Amazon loses $50 per unit on each sell of the device. Where they make up for the initial loss is the qualifying content. It will cost you to use it. Amazon's book selection is huge, they also have a big music selection all tempting ingredients to spend, spend, spend. Where it falls a bit short is the overall organization of the content, not the best sorted out logic around getting from point A to point B, but if it is all of what you know, then all is well.
Where things get a little iffy is the expectation for a dedicated reader to do gaming well, to watch movies and so forth. Kindle's e-reader can do these things better than most, but the separation between Kindle and Apple's iPad becomes literally readily apparent moving forward.
The iPad is not a talented e-reader dedicated for reading books. It's processor is so much more. The iPad and its accompanying software gives it a technical agility no e-reader can match. It is fast enough for gaming, the screen resolution is outstanding for gaming, all manners of books can be retrieved only from the Apple Library/Jukebox (itunes) its possible to talk on the phone and see who is on the other end. It does lightweight computing, its part of a separate eco-system, Apples. While the Fire is beholden to Amazon's eco-system. Some feel one is better than the other but it all depends on what you want to do. The bottom line, you can ask Apple's first version of the iPad to perform better than 98% of the tablets on the market because they are so far ahead of everyone, when it comes to the software and the processor working as one. An e-reader and their are some fine one's out there is not even in the same class as tablets. Sony has a fine tablet. The Sony inventory is as formidable as Amazon's it too should be considered in the mix. I have often stated the Sony Tablet is overlooked and is one of the better tablets on the market. Comparing an e-reader to a tablet or iPad is to compare the looks, thats about as likely an e-reader will ever be on par with a dedicated tablet or ipad. I hope this clears matters up a bit.
Best.
What is about people like the ipad?
Q. Like people love the iPad because it so new give me a answer for that question why
A. This pretty much sums it up why people buy apple products;
When the stars are arranged the right way this cult following can end up being really huge, as was the case with the runaway success of the iPod. It has to be said though, that while the iPod was not unique or revolutionary it was still a very useful product. At the time it came out a number of other companies (Archos, iRiver) were already making HDD jukeboxes whose specs were superior to those of the new gadget from Apple. But the problem with those technologically superior devices was that for some reason the companies making them limited themselves to targeting the âgeek marketâ and they forever stayed in that niche. Then Steve Jobs came along with his iPod and took digital music to the masses, simply by showing off Appleâs new cool gadget and explaining to the masses that the real in-vogue thing now was the iPod, over a thousand songs in your pocket. The guy wasnât talking gigabytes, he was speaking the language that everyone could understand, 1000 songs in âvery goodâ MP3 quality (in fact 160 kbps is rather average quality) in your pocket and ten hours of playback. In a way it was a classic case of hidden demand that just had to be uncovered or that the customers simply had to be told about.
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Title : Where to get a vintage style stereo? (ex. jukebox) with aux?
Description : Q. hi, I want a jukebox that plays music from my phone and iPad, not a real jukebox :p I have seen them on best buy and stuff but they'...