Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 37577
Berkeley CSUA MOTD
 
WIKI | FAQ | Tech FAQ
http://csua.com/feed/
2025/04/03 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/3     

2005/5/9 [Consumer/Audio] UID:37577 Activity:high
5/8     MP3 players might be causing permanent hearing loss:
        http://tinyurl.com/9qgr2 (news.scotsman.com)
        \_ ^mp3 players^loud music
           \_ I agree w/ that in general, but my iPod seems
              to be much louder even on the lowest volume
              setting than my discman.  It shouldn't be that
              hard to make the volume range larger (thus
           \_ I agree w/ that in general, but my iPod seems to be much
              louder even on the lowest volume setting than my discman.  It
              shouldn't be that hard to make the volume range larger (thus
              safer).
              \_ Rumor has it that The Steve is slightly deaf and kept telling
                 the iPod team to make it louder.
              \_ Rumor has it that The Steve is slightly deaf and kept
                 telling the iPod team to make it louder.
              \_ Actually, I have a similar problem on my laptop.  I use
                 it to listen to mp3s sometimes, but even the lowest
                 volume setting is higher than I like.  I need to get some
                 volume control headphones or something.
                 it to listen to mp3s sometimes, but even the lowest volume
                 setting is higher than I like.  I need to get some volume
                 control headphones or something.
        \_ Listening to CDs in inheriantly safer! -RIAA
        \_ Ben, nice news site.
           \_ ahem.  --scotsman
              \_ How much money did you donate to the Democrats?  To the
                 Republicans?  Who did you vote for in the last 3 elections?
                 What is your official policy on editorial bias?
        \_ Btw, I think I do get a bit of tinnitus sometimes. Like a really
           high pitched tone... but if I block my ears for a couple secs it
           goes away. I remember having that when I was a little kid too.
           Does any amount indicate hearing dmg? Is that what tinnitus is
           or would it persist?
           \_ It persists, so no -- it's probably not tinnitus.
2025/04/03 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/3     

You may also be interested in these entries...
2012/9/14-11/7 [Consumer/Camera, Consumer/CellPhone] UID:54477 Activity:nil 53%like:54476
9/12    iPhone 4S has new features like 8MP rear camera and Siri, and iPhone 5
        has 1.2MP front camera, 4" display, and 4G LTE.  My 17-month-old
        Android phone has 8MP rear camera, 1.3MP front camera, 4.2" display,
        voice search, voice-to-text that supports English, Cantonese,
        Mandarin, Japanese plus other languages/dialects that I don't speak,
        4G LTE, and voice-guided navigation, all built-in.  I don't get what
	...
2011/5/12-7/13 [Consumer/Audio] UID:54108 Activity:nil
5/21    Judgement Day
        \_ When Rapture comes, can I have your stereo?
	...
Cache (5041 bytes)
tinyurl.com/9qgr2 -> news.scotsman.com/entertainment.cfm?id=495772005&20050509005807
com MUSIC fans have been warned to turn down or switch off their iPods amid f ears the craze for MP3 players is storing up catastrophic and irreversib le hearing damage for a generation. The iPod - like all digital music players - is compact, stores huge amoun ts of music and can play for many hours. As a result, more people are li stening for longer to their favourite tracks. But audiologists believe tens of thousands of young people are causing se rious damage to themselves, and are likely to suffer tinnitus and loss o f hearing in later life. The experts say MP3 players should be designed to prevent people playing music above 90 decibels, about two-thirds of t he maximum volume of a typical device. Perhaps more worryingly for people who have 3,000 songs stored on an iPod , they also say listening should be restricted to no more than an hour a day. The original Walkman played cassettes with a maximum duration of two hour s, while portable CD players give up to 80 minutes a disc. A typical MP3 player, however, can store up to 300 hours of music and has batteries t hat last for 12 hours before needing to be recharged. Volume controls on many of the machines can be cranked up to in excess of 100 decibels, equivalent to standing five metres from a pneumatic drill . "It would obviously be beneficial to reduce the volume and restrict the u sage of personal players," said Christine DePlacido, principal audiologi cal scientist at the Victoria Hospital, Kirkcaldy. "The difficulty is in persuading people to do this before their hearing is damaged, as many b elieve hearing loss will not happen to them until they are much older. DePlacido added: "A lot of the young people I see with tinnitus describe listening to music at high intensities. It would be hard to say how grea t this problem is, bearing in mind I only see people who are distressed by their tinnitus. I imagine there are a lot more people out there who a re just living with it." Tinnitus and noise-induced hearing loss occurs when the delicate hair ner ve cells that line the inner ear undergo repeated trauma from loud sound vibrations. The Royal National Institute for the Deaf (RNID) is so concerned about th e damage being caused by MP3 players, it has issued advice on how to use them safely. Lisa McDonald, RNID campaigns officer, said: "Most people are listening to their iPods on public transport to drown out the noise of traffic, but to do this they turn them up to quite dangerous levels. "For example the noise on the London tube is about 90 decibels which is a lready loud enough to cause damage with a long period of exposure. "Because music is enjoyable people are much more willing to tolerate thos e levels of noise for much longer." Research by London-based audio expert Tony Hale has revealed that general noise levels have soared threefold compared with 30 years ago. He found the average street was 330% noisier than the countryside, with n oise in busy city centres reaching 90 decibels. Experts say people are having to turn up their MP3 players higher than wa s needed in the days of the Walkman in order to block out this clamour. Dr John Irwin, an audiology surgeon at Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, said: "The potential for damage exists because of the maximum output available from these devices. The process is a slow one rather than sudden, excep t in very unusual circumstances." A survey by RNID in 2002 found just 46% of young people in Scotland knew loud music could irreversibly damage their ears. It estimates about 340, 000 teenagers may be at risk of hearing damage due to listening to ampli fied music. Research shows 39% of 18 to 24-year-olds listen to personal stereos for m ore than an hour each day, with 13% listening for two hours or more. Many MP3 players in Europe have now had volume levels capped at 100dB aft er authorities in France ordered a clampdown on the devices. No one from Apple, who make iPods, was available for comment. MOVING WITH THE TIMES THE history of personal stereo systems dates back to the 1960s with the b oom in portable AM band receivers. These battery-powered systems were so ld by companies such as Panasonic, Toshiba and Olympus. Changes at Sony in 1979 meant that the tape recorder division was pressed into inventing a new product or risk facing consolidation. They came up with a small cassette player capable of stereo playback. The first models were marketed in the US as Sound-About and in the UK as the Stowaway. The product proved popular in Japan and hit the US in 1980. By the spring of 1981, at least two dozen companies were selling similar devices and by 1983 everyone wanted a one. Three years later the word Walkman entere d the Oxford English Dictionary. The end for Walkman came in 1986 when Sony announced the D-50, a portable audio device that could play the "perfect" sound compact discs. Then in November 2001 Apple blew the competition out of the water with it s new digital invention, the iPod. No larger than a cassette box, it cou ld hold up to 10,000 songs.