Bluetooth Music
#1
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Bluetooth Music
Hi Team, new to the forum ...first post. Quick question, I have an LS 460 (2007), my phone connects with bluetooth fine, however ....just the phone is operable. I am not able to play the music that is on the phone. Am I doing something wrong, or is that just the way it is?
Nello
Nello
#5
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Aux port will be better than current bluetooth.
The DICE (audiovox) units have a problem with the display flashing song titles on 2005-2009 cars - VERY distracting for the driver. The VAIS units need regular re-setting on these older cars too. And if you can use the interface on either, you're a better man than I!
The DICE (audiovox) units have a problem with the display flashing song titles on 2005-2009 cars - VERY distracting for the driver. The VAIS units need regular re-setting on these older cars too. And if you can use the interface on either, you're a better man than I!
#6
Unfortunately Nello we have 7 year old technology.
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#8
Aux port seems to work just fine, considering that most music played from a phone/ipod/et al is compressed, sometimes significantly so. What stinks is having to hang two cords off a phone (one aux, one power) when getting in/out of the car.
#9
Not so. Degree of compression from heavy to none is chosen by the user. Many people store ripped CD material on their iPods using Apple Lossless format. This allows bit-perfect reproduction of the original CD material which is digitally transmitted to the Lexus sound system for processing. Also, as I understand it, Bluetooth is a robust digital transmission medium with error correction and is therefore similarly capable of high fidelity (CD quality at least) if so chosen by the user.
#10
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Aux port will be better than current bluetooth.
The DICE (audiovox) units have a problem with the display flashing song titles on 2005-2009 cars - VERY distracting for the driver. The VAIS units need regular re-setting on these older cars too. And if you can use the interface on either, you're a better man than I!
The DICE (audiovox) units have a problem with the display flashing song titles on 2005-2009 cars - VERY distracting for the driver. The VAIS units need regular re-setting on these older cars too. And if you can use the interface on either, you're a better man than I!
i can't comment on DICE, honest not a fan of them. vaistech units with regular resetting is quite bs, at least on all gen5 and above systems, which includes the ls460. i have done more than 50 installs of vaistech across all lexus, i don't have a customer who comes to me about regular resetting. hanging does happen, but it's not on a regular basis at all. actually it did happen on my gs350, but that was because of my ipod. once i changed to new one it never occurred again
and in terms of distractions, inability to control song selections on screen and have to look down to the ipod, i think that's worse.
#11
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Not so. Degree of compression from heavy to none is chosen by the user. Many people store ripped CD material on their iPods using Apple Lossless format. This allows bit-perfect reproduction of the original CD material which is digitally transmitted to the Lexus sound system for processing. Also, as I understand it, Bluetooth is a robust digital transmission medium with error correction and is therefore similarly capable of high fidelity (CD quality at least) if so chosen by the user.
#12
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http://www.cnet.com/news/bluetooth-audio-vs-wires/
At the end of the day each individual has to do their own listening and choose the system that best meets their needs.
#13
I have the BT system on my 2012 LS, and gotta say, when playing Pandora from my Nokia 1020 via Bluetooth it sounds fantastic. This was a nice upgrade in going from my '08 LS to the '12 LS. On the negative side, I do miss the built in hard drive to store my music....oh well. Anyone know why the eliminated the hard drive from the ML audio system?
#14
Not so. Degree of compression from heavy to none is chosen by the user. Many people store ripped CD material on their iPods using Apple Lossless format. This allows bit-perfect reproduction of the original CD material which is digitally transmitted to the Lexus sound system for processing. Also, as I understand it, Bluetooth is a robust digital transmission medium with error correction and is therefore similarly capable of high fidelity (CD quality at least) if so chosen by the user.
#15
No disagreement at all. I was simply unaware that BT systems perform lossy compression of music data prior to digital transmission to audio components. I'm curious as to why lossy codecs would be part of the BT spec instead of a user choice like iTunes storage type, so I'll look into it. Thanks a bunch for the link and lead on Apt-X. (BTW, your last comment privileges subjective bias over objective, scientific analysis. Not a good thing in cancer research, not a good thing in audio.)