Though it relies on two small speakers, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 produced
much louder volume, but with less bass when playing the same song.
Not exact matches
The sound design's seamless blend of music and effects is so
much more layered, and the mix remains aggressively
loud — and deliciously anxiety - inducing at the right (i.e., correct)
volume — but no longer has a sharp edge to it.
More objectively flawed is the Dolby Digital 5.1 audio: dialogue is mixed
much too low (there's hushed and then there's inaudible), necessitating a boost in
volume well past reference level, at which point Max Avery Lichtenstein's inventive score sounds intrusively
loud.
Alas, the film grates early and often, trying to be
loud enough and crass enough to cover over the fact that, if
volume and the lewdness - factor were at all toned down, we'd discover that The Night Before is nearly vacant of a single thoughtful or interesting idea that merits two minutes of our attention,
much less two hours.
You don't need a measuring device to discover that it pulls harder than the GTO; every sustained surge of boost brings a crazed whooshing noise — like a recording of paper being ripped and then replayed
much louder — as the sheer
volume of ingested and recirculated air comprehensively muffles any exhaust noise.
You had to crank the
volume way, way up to hear
much (but then the noise was too
loud as well).
The iPad gets
much louder and sounds
much clearer at a higher
volume.
However, the levels on the Nexus 7 with headphones in was so
much louder we nearly blew out our eardrums at full
volume.
They can get pretty
loud, and don't lose too
much quality at high
volumes.
You're able to adjust on the fly, but I found the
volume slider to not be very precise, as I wished it was a dial setting with more «markers» for specific
volume levels since it either sounded too low or
loud without
much room in between to find that perfect setting.
A low dynamics «Night - Time» mode for playing at low
volumes, without losing too
much detail, or getting blown away by
loud sounds.
The iPad automatically adjusts to give you stereo audio whichever way you hold the device, and the combined
volume of those speakers is
much louder than you can get with the standard iPad — you can watch movies and other video and easily hear audio from across the room.
Initial release 1.0.0 with features: - Enable Numeric battery - Change Color and Typeface of the Battery text - Bypass Email Exchange PIN lock restriction - Disable Scrolling cache - Skip Music with
Volume buttons - Disable screen turn ON while plunging ot unplugging AC / USB cable - Disable loud volume sound warning - And much more t
Volume buttons - Disable screen turn ON while plunging ot unplugging AC / USB cable - Disable
loud volume sound warning - And much more t
volume sound warning - And
much more to come
Empirical testing aside, the Honeywell Lyric's
volume was subjectively
much louder than the other sensors.
Though I was only able to hear a brief audio demonstration, the S9's sound seems fuller and more importantly for those who enjoy video and audio content with the
volume turned up,
much louder than last year's flagship Samsung devices.
I could fill that space with music at extremely high
volume (
much louder than I'd ever play) without the speaker breaking up into unpleasant distortion.
In fact, they are
much louder than you would expect, and I find myself keeping the MateBook leveled at about 20 percent system
volume most of the time.
Call quality was solid if unspectacular, though I very
much appreciated the Extra
Volume button that makes the other person just astonishingly
loud in your earpiece — construction zones and sirens be damned, you'll hear just fine.
Dual front - facing speakers get incredibly
loud —
louder than pretty
much any other phone — without distortion or piercing the ear at full
volumes.
Notching 82 decibels at top
volume on the Laptop Mag Audio Test, the Eye was
much louder than the Galaxy S5 (73 dB) but just a hair softer than the One M8 (83 dB).
We don't watch movies, she can not understand some of the plots, or jokes, and refuses to even care to try, she can't stand talking too
much, she gets confused and tired, or will say I am too
loud when I am talking the same tone I talk to with everyone in my life, and we don't watch movies because she always has to put the
volume on it's most lowest level, and then we sit and watch pictures.