After highlighting the files, to choose the “copy command, right-click on the FIRST filename. If you highlight ALL the files in a folder and then choose the “copy” command by right-click on the filename of the LAST FILE, for some reason that becomes the first one that will play (and I assume is then probably the first one that was copied). Generally when one copies files from a PC (and maybe a MAC, but I don’t know) the files you are selecting are all in one folder and listed in the order you are wanting them to be played, possibly alphabetically, but in your case, having a prefix number, you’ll see them listed numerically. Iv’e read that, for all FAT versions, the order the files will play in a player is dependent on the order in which they are copied onto the drive, and NOT what their file names are. Here is what I have read, and following it is what I have done to “fix” it.Īlmost certainly the USB drive will be formatted to FAT, FAT 32 or ExFAT (but NOT NTFS). I have had this same thing happen to my audio files that I keep on a flash drive. This has got me baffled, so I know there’s a bunch of Digital Music Gurus out there who have what’s probably a pretty simple answer to this bizarre dilemma. But when I burn them to a CD they’re in exactly the correct order and play as they should. I’ve tried dropping the leading zeros (0) on songs 1 thru 9, putting a dash between the numbers and the song titles (01-Midnight Rider, etc) and everything else I can think of but nothing works. wma format, the last numbered song jumped to the first one and the rest played in the correctly-sorted order. mp3, even going to the trouble of correctly numbering them in the “metadata” portion (where the titles and what-not are) before saving them, thinking that might help. So then I trundled-out my faithful Audacity program and laboriously converted them all to. Each time I removed the last numbered song the next one in line jumped up to the first song played. So when I deleted #60, #59 took its place and played as the first song exactly as before and it followed the same pattern. The “real” #1 song would then play as #2 and the rest would play in the correct order. For some nutty reason the last song numbered 60 would insist on playing 1st, no matter what I did. wma files, numbered 01, 02, etc for a total of about 60 files. DSD Sampling rate: DSD 2.8MHz, 5.6MHz, 11.2MHz, 22.This is my 1st venture into putting audio files on a USB flash drive as opposed to the trusty ol’ CD, to play on my garden-variety Sony ghetto blaster.Format Supported: MP3, WMA, WAV, AIF, AIFC, AIFF, AAC, FLAC, OGG, APE, ALAC, M4A, DSF, DFF.Frequency Response: 20Hz-20kHz ☐.05 Output Impedance: Finally, it has an Android App with iOS App in the works, and allows you to push music through AirPlay or DLNA. The double-shell structure of the element M changes the fixed resonant frequency and reduces the negative impact of resonance on sound quality. The element M can be controlled using the included RM3 infrared remote control or through the app. The output stage for the headphone amp is set in a high quiescent current state, giving you an intriguing mellow sound performance. It functions as a high quality headphone amp that has a bipolar input stage that effectively rejects common-mode distortion. The element M is a powerful audio playback system based on Freescale quad-core ARM computing platform and supports all popular audio formats. It uses the ES9028PRO advanced D/A solution and SiTime low phase noise clock to maximize its potential performance. The Matrix element M DAC/Amp provides a desktop two-channel stereo simplification solution for mid-range active speaker and headphone users. Please check out the second generation model of this product, the Matrix element M2 DAC/Amp/Streamer. We hate to be the bearers of bad news, but the Matrix element M DAC/Amp has reached its end of life.
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