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On the plus side for you, the difference in battery life between a true 64MB iPod and a 32MB one are neglibile.The 64MB iPod spins the disc up less often, true, but it has to spin it up and use it for longer to fill the bigger buffer, so I doubt you'll notice much difference.
The RAM doesn't make that much difference. The 64 MB model has a bigger battery.
About how hard is it to get my hands on a 64MB main board? I've got no idea where a good place to go for that sort of thing... ebay but that's always a bit sketchy for parts of anything... advice?
The battery life times between the 5th gen and 5.5 is pretty dramatic... like 12 hours vs. 18.
Quote from: jwalker1196 on July 08, 2009, 06:42:18 AMThe battery life times between the 5th gen and 5.5 is pretty dramatic... like 12 hours vs. 18.What is your source for this information?
Quote from: jwalker1196 on July 08, 2009, 07:54:53 AMAbout how hard is it to get my hands on a 64MB main board? I've got no idea where a good place to go for that sort of thing... ebay but that's always a bit sketchy for parts of anything... advice?There's always iFixit.
The original batteries are 400mAh and 600mAh respectively, so a 50% increase in battery life is exactly what you'd expect.Battery benching my 5.5G with rockbox gives me 21 hours playing fairly high bitrate AAC (forget what exactly) but it depends a lot on codec and settings (some of the gain there is because i have it set to turn the lcd off entirely, which makes quite a bit of difference).
You seem to be under the misconception that only 5.5G had 64MB of RAMThe difference was parallel to the HD size - 30GB players all had 32MB while 60 and 80GB players (5Gs and 5.5Gs) had 64MB of RAM.RAM can make a difference on the battery life, but it's not nearly as significant as you seem to think it will be. The most significant things are codec used (time the CPU is running at full power to decode), backlight usage, and the actual size of your battery.
Since I seem to have a 5th gen main board, I can only assume I'll have 5th-gen battery times. Or is the battery in the 5.5-gen also of larger capacity?
You do realize that it's possible to do battery benchmarks with half the RAM on any player and demonstrate that it halves playback time (which is what you seem to be claiming it does). You'll notice it's quite possible to get 21h of playback in Rockbox on a 32MB iPod with a stock battery (with a few patches that may not end up committed for other reasons).Meanwhile on the Archos Players, having 8MB of RAM vs the initially installed 2MB did increase runtime, but it didn't quadruple it as your "3 hours vs 6.5 hours" comparison suggests it should.So far all real battery benchmarks contributed haven't shown it as being as significant a difference as you think it ought to be. You seem to take me saying "it's not as significant as you seem to think" to mean "it doesn't make a difference." Nobody denies it does, and nobody denies the difference will increase as bitrate increases.As to your misconception: QuoteSince I seem to have a 5th gen main board, I can only assume I'll have 5th-gen battery times. Or is the battery in the 5.5-gen also of larger capacity?If you knew that some 5th gens have 64MB of RAM, why are you referring to them as "5th-gen battery times"?Please, come back with actual battery benches across multiple bitrates showing the differences in 64MB of RAM vs 32MB. But don't complain about your willing misinterpretations of what I've said. I said it clearly would affect things, and only said it wouldn't be as significant.It's also rather frustrating you've also willingly misinterpreted what I said in another thread to fuel your misplaced anger. I clearly did not tell him his old build was the cause, I only told the him that he should update before posting (which is mentioned in the forum guidelines and a requirement, independently of whether it might be the cause).If his problems occur in the same files every time, as he said they did, given the history of problems our users have had the most likely problem is a drive with errors.Instead your first suggestion is that he may be using an audio format we don't actually support (Vorbis doesn't support SBR, so either we wouldn't be able to play the file period, or it would be like MP3+ where we ignore the SBR data).Your third suggestion is even dumber, frankly, suggesting that his boost got locked "low." This can't persist across reboots (as debug values are not saved). Not to mention 24mhz is barely enough to run the WPS, and given his descriptions of the problem (including mentioning the files are 192kbps Vorbis) he almost definitely wouldn't be able to play any file he's tried realtime.So rather than offering truly useful suggestions to him, what you did is propose two ideas that add confusion into the mix, while mentioning my suggestion is worth checking out (then complaining at me for the same suggestion elsewhere). Of course you did throw in a mention that defragmenting might be useful, once more demonstrating you lack of understanding. See, fragmentation would affect it as it's loaded, but not during playback. Heavy disk fragmentation could make the buffer take longer, sure. But once it was buffered it would be defragmented in RAM - this means that what songs skipping would occur on would depend entirely on playlist order. The user said it's always the same songs, so if his statement is truthful it wouldn't be an issue of fragmentation.I do appreciate you don't like me, but at the very least, please try not to give stupid advice that will just confuse users.
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