I have a Bose Solo TV Sound System and when I stream the native apps (Youtube, Netflix) I have sound coming through the sound system. When I stream from a Chrome Tab locally, no sound comes through the sound system, just the TV. Is it possible to get sound through the system and not the TV when streaming videos from the laptop through a Chrome Tab?
ill be hoping to see how this works as well....
Bumping to see if anyone has any ideas.
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I have recorded a bunch of videos on the Tilt and have them transferred to the desktop. The video and sound works fine in quicktime player, but sound is missing with any other players like VLC and media player classic. I hate quicktime, so is there a way to get sound on VLC and/or media player classic?
bmt134 said:
I have recorded a bunch of videos on the Tilt and have them transferred to the desktop. The video and sound works fine in quicktime player, but sound is missing with any other players like VLC and media player classic. I hate quicktime, so is there a way to get sound on VLC and/or media player classic?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Download KM Player...
I will play everything.
[size=+1]KM Player[/size]
Thanks, KMPlayer was able to play the vids with sound. Although, I don't like too many apps installed on my comp, so does anyone know how to get sound in VLC or Media Player Classic?
Could be wrong, but I think the MP4 vids produced by the TyTnII use an AMR codec for audio? If so, it might be worth giving http://www.afreecodec.com/win/946/open-amr-codec-narrowband/download/ a spin?
When I watch video with bluetooth headphones, there is an audio delay from the bluetooth that puts the audio/video out of sync. On my old Palm Centro, TCPMP had a setting where you could adjust the audio offset, which came in handy for this.
Does anyone know of an Android video player app that has this feature? So far, I have not been able to find one.
Hey guys, I want to cast just 1 window, such as 1 tab or kodi for example, it works good but the audio is coming from my PC and not from my TV while casting entire screen both audio and video are coming from the TV, is there a way to make both audio and video from the TV by casting a window?
Thanks for any help.
I mainly have been using Google Play Music cause of the cool Media Controller that is colored by the album and liked it but others have been using others such as PowerAMP or Samsung Music, etc and wanted to see what you all recommend for music playing and also Samsung Sound Effects such as Surround/Dolby Atmos, Concert Hall, Audio Preset, etc.
Current Config
Player: Google Play Music (cause Album colored Media Controller)
Sound Effects:
Surround/Dolby Atmos: Off
UHQ Upscaler: On (Bit and Bandwidth Upscale)
Concert Hall: On
Preset: Normal
Adapt Sound: Custom
Spotify.
Dolby atmos on.
Custom sound on. Depending where I play. I got profiles to use on my car ICE, wired headphones and BT headphones.
I find dolby atmos improve spotify by far.. Before it spotify sound quality sucks
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
I've been going back and forth between PowerAmp and N7.
So far trying PowerAmp and sounds the same until I switch to this preset.
EQ: Speakers (Loud)
Reverb: Off
Resampler: SoX 99.0%
Output: Hi-Res, Sample 384kHz from 48kHz
Buffer: Normal
DVC: ON
MusicFX: OFF
Any PowerAmp users want to share their profiles or suggest changes to mine?
I just use the stock Samsung Music Player that comes bundled with the Samsung OS. It is pretty good and plays whatever I want. Seeing as I keep all my music stored locally on my microSDcard.
If you are an Apple device user, stick with Apple, otherwise....
I've been into Home Theater for 30 years and try to keep up with everything, get best bang for the buck, make sure I'm using all my equipment to its fullest potential.
The Chromecast for Google TV has a well-designed interface, especially if you are willing to use their YouTube TV service for all your live channels as it is well integrated. However over the past three weeks with the goal of finally cutting the Comcast/Xfinity cable (which I did and am saving $80/month), this is my experience in a nutshell.
Chromecast with Google TV - YouTube TV & Hulu stream in 2-channel PCM. If you have a mid to high range AVR, it can spoof surround though quite well using DTS Neo 6 or Dolby Pro Logic 2 but still not as "clean" as a true 5.1 source signal.
Roku Streaming Stick + - A close competitor to the latest Chromecast with Google TV. Works well for people that want a simpler menu/interface to just navigate to each of their streaming services without a lot of other stuff/recommendations in your face. Has voice control from the remote. Hulu streams in 5.1. HBOMax streams in 2-channel PCM!!! Returned it.
Tivo Stream 4K - Streams every service in 5.1 (or Atmos Dolby Digital+ if service supports it). Better remote than the Chromecast with Google TV as it has more buttons including a very useful Info button that works in some apps like being able to see the video and audio stream specs in realtime of your Netflix stream to verify you are getting 4K and Atmos. Also if you can link your Tivo account to your Sling account, and Pluto, and Locast which allows the TIVO Guide to combine all the channels into one guide. Unfortunately though it doesn't have the option to add YouTube TV into the Tivo native channel guide. I'd still use this device over Chromecast with Google TV just because it streams Hulu in 5.1 instead of 2-channel PCM (currently.)
What is strange is essentially these are all Android TV Operating System Devices. So initially I thought it was the developers of the particular streaming service's fault that they are streaming their audio in 2-channel PCM. But apparently, it is both a combination of the hardware and app software, as otherwise why does Hulu stream in 2-channel PCM on the Chromecast and 5.1 on the Roku and Tivo or conversely why does HBOMax on the Roku stream in 2-channel and in 5.1 on the Chromecast? They are all Android TV Software Apps!
Story of my life in trying to get the most for my money -- end up spending tens if not hundreds of hours testing, talking in forums, troubleshooting, chatting with first-line tech support that has no clue about advanced technical issues, etc. This is where the Apple people can chime in an assert that Apple is wortth he extra money to avoid wasted time making everything "work" but Apple has it's issues drawbacks too.
I've kept my Chromecast and the Tivo Stream 4K. So if the Chromecast with Google TV gets their act together with the respective streaming devs, I may go back to it. But I'm no longer using YouTube TV as I watch very little live TV so the $70 with tax per month isn't justified. I'm lucky enough to have Locast.org for my areas, combine that with the Streamium DVR app (free or $5/month donation) and I use Sling for CNN and ESPN, and I'm quite happy on the TIVO Stream 4K.
Bottom line: Chromecast with Google TV has a great interface but it's just not up to speed on the audio streaming capabilities on all streaming services. Pretty disappointing.
jazee said:
What is strange is essentially these are all Android TV Operating System Devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just a quick note that Roku is running RokuOS, not Android TV. Sure, if you go deep enough, they share a same core (Linux), but that's pretty much it. They're completely different operating systems.
jazee said:
stream in 2-channel PCM
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can't speak for everybody, but I only have 2 ears, so I'm perfectly happy with 2-channel audio.
As long as the device is secure and stable (read as: not some half baked made-in-china trash that spies on you and keeps crashing), and can run the software that I WANT (read as: I don't give a damn about "streaming services"), then the box works perfectly.
The main thing that bothers me about this chromecast are;
1) The included launcher has ads that can only be partially disabled,
2) The remote has THREE useless buttons.