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Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016
Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016







hqplayer doesnt start server 2016 hqplayer doesnt start server 2016
  1. #Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016 android
  2. #Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016 software

At the bottom are navigation buttons for previous track, pause, stop, and next track. Just below these is a live line graph of the progress of track play. Play something, and the center of the screen changes from the company logo and product name to a display of the format and resolution of the file, flanked by track clock and track duration.

#Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016 software

Along the top right of the screen are three icons indicating the integrity of the Ethernet and USB links and the status of the audio engine—the latter an indication that the unit is booted-up and the software loaded. Next to the volume controls is a digital readout of volume level in dB. Turning on the PP brings up a splash screen, soon replaced by the Home screen: on the left are Volume Up, Mute, Down on the right, navigation Up, Home, Down. In short: one input (Ethernet), one output (USB). On the rear panel are terminals for two WiFi antennas, an input jack for its 12V power supply, a USB 3.0 port for an external hard drive, a USB 2.0 port for output to an exaSound DAC, an HDMI connector reserved for future use, and an Ethernet RJ45 network jack. On the front panel is a large multicolor touchscreen—it takes up most of the panel—and a power button and indicator light. This case measures just 6.5" wide by 2.2" high by 9.25" deep, which means that a PP and an e28 can share a shelf in an equipment rack, linked by a short (but not too short) USB link. The PlayPoint (PP) costs $1999, weighs 2.4 lbs, and is contained in the same sleek, compact case as the e28. More pointedly, the PlayPoint is an intelligent network interface: it and its DAC can be located and operated remotely from the source of the music files.īecause I own an exaSound e28 multichannel DAC ($3299), on which I rely for all of my music listening when using my main system, in Manhattan, I was excited to get my hands on a PlayPoint to see how it might enhance that experience.

#Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016 android

ĮxaSound's website states that the PlayPoint has a network input, uses USB to connect to an exaSound DAC (and, at the moment, only an exaSound DAC), and that "playback is controlled remotely with various apps for iPad, iPhone, Android devices, Macs and PCs." I believe that qualifies it to be called a renderer. Any combination of these elements can be put in a single box and described by one of many new hyphenated product categories—or can be given a name along the lines of exaSound's PlayPoint Network Audio Player: a model designation that at least hints at this product's ability to play music. These days we have storage devices, servers, streamers, renderers, bridges, controllers, players, and DACs, at least one of which is hoped to have a volume control. The number of devices that can constitute a home-audio streaming system ranges from one—a laptop computer running a music program to play internally stored files—to x the unknown.









Hqplayer doesnt start server 2016