So sánh jet audio và music player

jetAudio is the highest rated and most downloaded media player on CNET.COM and now you can listen to same high-quality sound on your Android phone using jetAudio.

-- Sound Effects & Visualization plugins -- * Crystalizer * AM3D Audio Enhancer (http://www.am3d.com) * Bongiovi DPS (http://www.bongioviacoustics.com) * Visualizations (Sound effect and Visualization plugins will be sold separately through in-app purchase.)

It plays almost any type of digital music files you have (.wav, .mp3, .ogg, .flac, .m4a, .mpc, .tta, .wv, .ape, .mod, .spx, .opus, .wma* and more) and, it provides a very high quality sound with various effects and enhancements such as Wide, Reverb, X-Bass.

It comes with 32 equalizer presets that will provide a wide array of listening experience. For those who would like to customize their own sound experience, it also allows 10/20 bands graphic equalizer and other advanced playback functions including playback speed control, crossfading, AGC and much more.

It can stream music from shared folders on local home network or WebDAV servers. It works with shared folders from Windows, USB drive attached to router, Network drives (NAS) or WebDAV servers.

It also can stream music files in the cloud such as Google Drive, Dropbox, Box, OneDrive.

Free Basic version provides same features with Plus version except advertisements and some features. To enjoy full features of jetAudio, please purchase Plus version.

-- Features for Plus version only -- * 20-bands graphic equalizer * Tag Editor (MP3, FLAC, OGG, M4A) * Display lyrics in tag (Unsynchronized lyrics) * 3 lock screens * Pitch shifter * Precise playback speed control (50% ~ 200%) * Light Gray/White theme for browser (Plus only) * Grid mode for Artist/Song/Folder/Genre browser * Adjust FF/REW interval * Expanded notification bar (for JB) * MIDI playback (using jetAudio WaveTable MIDI synthesizer engine)

-- Features for Basic/Plus version -- * Play music via Wi-Fi from shared folders on local home network * Can choose between 3 List modes or 10 Grid modes for layout style (In Basic version, layout style can be chosen in Album browser only) * 14 app widgets : 4x1 (

2), 4x2 (

3), 4x3 (

3), 4x4 (

3), 3x3, 2x2, 2x3

* Find on YouTube * Last.fm (requires official Last.fm app) * X-Wide, Reverb, X-Bass sound effects * AGC (automatic gain control) to avoid volume fluctuations between tracks * Speed control from 50% to 200% (pitch adjusted) * Crossfading, Gap-less playback * Fade-in/Fade-out * Repeat A<->B * Browser and play music by artists, albums, songs, playlists, genres and folders * Balance/Volume control * Sleep timer up to 24 hours * Flick up to post what you're listening to on Twitter * Flick down to show Now Playing * Flick left/right to play next/previous * Lock screens * Bluetooth headphone button control * Send track information via Bluetooth AVRCP 1.3 * Multi-select function (Delete/Add to playlist) * Keep screen on, Lock orientation options * Shake to play next/previous track * Supporting formats: MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, M4A, MPC, TTA, WV, APE, MOD (module formats S3M, IT), SPX, OPUS, AIFF (WMA may not be supported on some devices. Please check your device specification for WMA support)

(If you want to localize jetAudio for your language, please contact [email protected] for more information)

Among the competition in the realm of Android music players, each app brings its unique flair. Poweramp stands out with its powerful features, while PlayerPro boasts a clean interface and funny-themed customization options. JetAudio, recognized for its extensive feature set, also adds a touch of humor with its diverse audio enhancements and themes. Meanwhile, Musicolet, a lightweight player, might not have funny names, but its feature-rich profile, offline capabilities, and tag editor contribute to a delightful music experience for users. Each app caters to different preferences, ensuring Android users can find both functionality and a touch of humor in their music player of choice.

Chương trình này đã được xuất bản trên Softonic vào ngày 13 tháng 8 năm 2019 và chúng tôi chưa có khả năng thử nghiệm nó.

Chúng tôi khuyến khích bạn thử nó và để lại cho chúng tôi một nhận xét hoặc đánh giá nó trên trang web của chúng tôi. Cộng đồng người dùng của chúng tôi sẽ thực sự đánh giá cao nó!

JetAudio - Trình phát nhạc MP3 hoạt động trên iOS 12.1.2 trở lên. Phiên bản hiện tại của phần mềm là 9.1.3 và bạn có thể chạy nó bằng tiếng Catalan, tiếng Đức và tiếng Séc.

jetAudio may be new to me, but is actually one of the oldest players on this list, with the first iOS version hailing all the way from 2014. Don’t let the underwhelming App Store listing promo screenshots deceive you, jetAudio is a surprisingly feature-rich and customizable player, albeit with some minor drawbacks.

On the surface, jetAudio is a standard, general-purpose player, with the conventional “Artists”, “Albums”, “Songs”, etc. views all tucked away under a hamburger menu. However, jetAudio’s depth reveals itself upon diving into its player view and preferences.

In the player view, tapping the top half of the album art reveals a treasure trove of hidden features. One such feature is—as far as I’m aware—unique to jetAudio: a suite of visualizers. At time of writing, jetAudio provides twenty unique visualizers to choose from, along with an “Auto Change” option to automatically cycle through them at a set interval. While they’re not all to my taste, with jetAudio providing so many to choose from this hardly warrants a complaint. You can see a few of my favorites in the compilation below.

[HTML5 video tag not supported by your browser] [HTML5 video tag not supported by your browser] Brief demonstration of LED Spectrum, Reflected Spectrum, and Stained Glass, three of the twenty visualizers available in jetAudio.

There’s still plenty in the player view toolbar we’ve yet to explore; there’s a suite of equalizer and audio enhancer plugins available for purchase, among them a full, traditional equalizer board. All these capabilities make jetAudio fantastic for listeners who love granular, professional control over their audio playback on iOS. While I personally dislike effects or equalization curves added to my music, every single one provided by jetAudio can be disabled to return to flat playback. The toolbar also includes a sleep timer like Music Player X does, but jetAudio’s timer interface blows Music Player X’s out of the water with its use of the iOS roulette “picker” wheel instead of Music Player X’s practically unusable “tap to add more seconds” approach.

The feature-rich toolbar isn’t without issue; The toolbar is comically undiscoverable, providing no labels or buttons to indicate its existence. This forces users to just “know” that tapping an arbitrary area of the album art will toggle the bar’s visibility, a textbook case of poor interface design. To top it off, no animations of any kind accompany showing or hiding the toolbar. Instead, the toolbar lazily pops in and out of view with no easing whatsoever. Frankly, everything about the toolbar aside from the actual features it contains is a catastrophic mess and begs for a usability and experience redesign.

jetAudio’s independent library support is also marred by a mediocre implementation. While jetAudio does indeed support importing and managing music independently of iTunes and Apple Music, it’s very limited compared to its contemporaries like Doppler 2 and Doppi. jetAudio only supports two methods of music transfer: importing with iTunes on Windows or Finder on macOS and importing with peer-to-peer WiFi. While this covers both wired and wireless use-cases, it’s nonetheless disappointing AirDrop’s not supported. Additionally, music imported this way is not represented in the app’s standard browser views like “Artists”, “Songs”, etc. Instead, music added this way is siphoned off to a separate “Folder” view, which can only display the files exactly as they were sent. This means jetAudio ignores your library’s metadata for the purposes of organizing and presenting your music, it just displays them like Windows Explorer or Finder would (including their file extensions). While jetAudio providing this feature at all is nice, its peers like Doppler 2 and Doppi blow it out of the water; they treat music imported this way as first-class citizens, as if they were managed and synced with iTunes or Apple Music, leaving jetAudio’s choice to both segment and display them like regular files feeling like a quick and cheap afterthought, in comparison.

However, these misses are quickly forgiven upon discovering jetAudio’s genuinely impressive arsenal of interface customization options, rivaled only in number by Marvis Pro. Not only does jetAudio provide the ability to view your music in list and grid views (as any mature player should), it even provides granular control over those views. For grid view, you can customize the number of columns to better fit your screen size and taste. While Marvis Pro also supports such customization (the only other player I’ve found that does), even it doesn’t provide equivalent customization options for list views like jetAudio does; for list view, you can also customize the item size, ranging anywhere from the traditional “tight” list items used for most other players to comically massive list items. To top it off, these options are uniquely persisted per menu, so you can have the “Albums” view display with a grid but keep “Artists” as a list. This only scratches the surface of jetAudio’s customization features, which to highlight a few more include the ability to crossfade song transitions and even graceful fade in or out when pausing and playing (one of my personal favorites).

While jetAudio no doubt has issues to sort out, it supports many features that simply aren’t available anywhere else; it’s unrivaled in equalization, the only player I’ve found supplies multiple visualizers to choose from, and the only player that rivals Marvis Pro in sheer number of interface configuration options. Since visualizers are a brand new feature this year, development is clearly still thriving after all these years and shows no signs of slowing down. If you’ve seen jetAudio in the store before and written it off in the past like I once did, I encourage you reconsider and give it a shot.