Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Was browsing Yahoo! when i came across this:
Teenagers seem to know that loud music can damage their hearing, yet most see no reason to lower the volume on their mp3s.
Very common dun u think? Very often you can hear others mp3 blasting their music and u can hear the music as if you turned on ur external speakers. I sometimes wonder, dun their ears ache from the extreme loudness of their mp3s?
They gave a rough guide for the volume of ur mp3s. Pretty useful i guess.
As a general "rule of thumb," MP3 users set the volume no higher than 60 percent of its full capacity when using "ear bud" style headphones, like those that come with iPods.
With over-the-ear headphones, they recommend 70 percent as the maximum.
Save your ears now, before its too late!
posted at 9:21 PM
0 comments
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Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Was browsing Yahoo! when i came across this:
Teenagers seem to know that loud music can damage their hearing, yet most see no reason to lower the volume on their mp3s.
Very common dun u think? Very often you can hear others mp3 blasting their music and u can hear the music as if you turned on ur external speakers. I sometimes wonder, dun their ears ache from the extreme loudness of their mp3s?
They gave a rough guide for the volume of ur mp3s. Pretty useful i guess.
As a general "rule of thumb," MP3 users set the volume no higher than 60 percent of its full capacity when using "ear bud" style headphones, like those that come with iPods.
With over-the-ear headphones, they recommend 70 percent as the maximum.
Save your ears now, before its too late!
posted at 9:21 PM
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