Despite some minor criticism, Roon is light years ahead of the competition. It’s like comparing the sun to a candle .
The long experience at Sooloos shows.
They are in a league of their own.
And yet he’s probably built a system that doesn’t compress. Classic.
The issue wasn’t the core update. I have those boxes unchecked.
The App Store automatically updated all of my iOS devices. Once it did that, none of the iOS remote devices could communicate with the 1.7 core.
On my Mac I have the option to check/un check automatic updates. I don’t own an iPhone so I don’t know about that.
Same on the iPhone and iPad, you can choose to disable automatic updates.
I think 1.8 sounds better also and I didn’t add any draft excluders to my system.
Jah… NOW I know that.
Great, you’re all set for when Roon 1.9 arrives then.
From now on, major updates will done at a place and time of my choosing.
Would Roon 1.8 sound better on £360 worth of Isoacoustics Orea rather than £4 of draft excluder? I will never know.
I had to look this one up. A term I’m not familiar.
Is that similar to draft dodger or is it an acquaintance excluded from a round of drafts at the Pub?
You never get freezing cold wind blowing through 100 year old window frames in Texas?
Not down here except for this week with our 100 car pile up in Fort Worth on Freeway yesterday due to cold. 6 dead and 65 injured. But that does give me the picture
A case of SoCal distancing on freeway and six feet social distances taken too literally behind the wheel.
In the states it would be called weatherstripping.
But “draft excluder” sounds so much more “prohibitive”.
@Craig_Burgess Thank you for that, if I ever get to visit Chicago and the hotel windows are falling out, I will know what to ask for at the hardware store.
However, @scotte1 a “draft excluder” is an irate editor, it’s a “draught excluder”. At my hardware store all I have to do is quote the Fool “court holy-water in a dry house is better than this rain-water out o’ door” and Bert behind the counter says, “ah, you’ll be after some DRAUGHT excluder”.
LOL.
Once again, we might be being impacted by that big “pond” between us and the language isolation it has imposed over the decades.
According to Ms. Webster:
(Definition) 11a: “a current of air in a closed-in space.”
That said, to continue this riff – isn’t a “Draught Excluder” a bartender that checks ID’s?
Cheers!
I think “Draught Denier” is more a la mode, in the spirit of Cancel Culture, but otherwise full marks, give yourself an A+.
Draught excluder is critical to understanding not just of Shakespeare (Lear, The Tempest, Twelfth Night), but to Beethoven (op. 31/2) and Bob Dylan, although draught excluder would have had limited benefit in The Tempest or Tempest given they involved shipwrecks. Twelfth Night is one of few comedies about a shipwreck and took place in the Caribbean, on your side of the pond.