by rusty » Tue Jun 24, 2003 12:04 pm
Re. the tinny sound, I'm not sure what you're comparing it to. If you're comparing it to Winamp, there shouldn't really be a noticeable difference. If you're comparing it to MS Mediaplayer, which has SRS enabled by default, there might be some noticeable difference.
There are a couple of ways to deal with this:
1) Tune the equalizer
2) Install and enable the dfx plug-in (one of my favorites):
http://dl.filekicker.com/send/file/1294 ... winamp.exe
3) Enable the Stereo expander plug-in that comes with Songs-DB (I find that the effect is sufficiently subtle so as not to detract from the music).
Note: all of the above assumes that you installed MAD and CD Reader correctly. If you installed them manually, then you
must rename the original mp3 and cd plugins to in_dsmp3.dll.off and in_cda.dll.off respectively, so that they're not used by Songs-DB (or you can simply delete the original plugins).
Re. the tinny sound, I'm not sure what you're comparing it to. If you're comparing it to Winamp, there shouldn't really be a noticeable difference. If you're comparing it to MS Mediaplayer, which has SRS enabled by default, there might be some noticeable difference.
There are a couple of ways to deal with this:
1) Tune the equalizer
2) Install and enable the dfx plug-in (one of my favorites): [url]http://dl.filekicker.com/send/file/129468-V2QS/dfx_for_winamp.exe[/url]
3) Enable the Stereo expander plug-in that comes with Songs-DB (I find that the effect is sufficiently subtle so as not to detract from the music).
Note: all of the above assumes that you installed MAD and CD Reader correctly. If you installed them manually, then you [b]must[/b] rename the original mp3 and cd plugins to in_dsmp3.dll.off and in_cda.dll.off respectively, so that they're not used by Songs-DB (or you can simply delete the original plugins).