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branchandroot: butterfly on a desk with a world in a bottle (butterfly glass desk)
SUCK IT, APPLE, YOU LOSERS, YOUR AIRPLAY PIECE OF CRAP IS FIXED.

Ahem. That is to say, I found a way around one of AirPlay's known persistent bugs. Since this calls for both gloating and some documentation, here we go.

AirPlay (Apple's stream-music-over-wifi protocol) has two known bugs that are incredibly annoying and have not been fixed for twenty years. (Cue gnashing of teeth, etc.)

1: You can't edit a song's metadata in iTunes/Music while AirPlay is enabled. Want to change the genre? Add a comment? Fix the artist's name? Too bad! Even worse, sometimes it will look like the tags were changed, but the change will not actually be written to the file, and as soon as you turn AirPlay off five years worth of changes will disappear and leave you screaming into the void. Just as a totally random example. All you can do about this is turn AirPlay off every time you want to edit the metadata, so the changes take.

2: iTunes/Music has a setting that will normalize the loudness of songs--that is, adjust the gain so they all play at about the same loudness regardless of what the actual file is recorded at. But this setting doesn't work while you're using AirPlay! So if you have, for example, playlists with songs from different artists, it's very likely you'll either constantly be adjusting the volume or just living with the nails-on-blackboard unevenness.

I have over 9000 songs in my music library and mostly listen to mixed playlists, so you can imagine that this became fairly critical when I finally decided AirPlay was the best option for my upstairs speakers. Thankfully, while I still can't do anything about 1, I have found a solution for 2. It requires several steps, and that you be on a laptop/desktop rather than a tablet or phone.

details below )

Of course, I'm going to need to do the mp3-conversion and normalizing steps again every time I add new music, but between Audacity's batch conversion and MP3 Normalizer's batch conversion, this should not be onerous. Annoying, but not onerous.
branchandroot: Hatsuharu looking pissed (Haru black)
Apple TV continues to be an unsupported piece of shit hardware, and I have my eye on the rplay app coming out for Raspberry Pi, and another eye on developments in the digital receivers. Because it might be better to get a good /receiver/ from someone who knows how the fuck to do A/V electronics. Not that the old Technics isn't still going strong, but that kind of makes the point; a good receiver is way better than a piece of hardware the company calls a "hobby" and yet releases and charges a hundred bucks for anyway.

Fuck you, Apple, you have so lost my respect as a company, lately.

This post brought to you by the developing buzz and popping in my precious Bose speakers and the two hours of carting different bits of speakers and cable around the house in an effort to find some configuration that would test where the problem was. !Surprise, it was the Apple TV.

Notes so far, for fellow sufferers:

The wi-fi signal dropping problem can be mostly fixed by re-ordering your network in Settings > Network > little gear button. Put wi-fi on top, save, and restart. Note that iTunes itself is partially at fault, and will still drop the TV sometimes if you're changing settings.

Changing the Dolby setting on the Apple TV under General > Audio and Video does a soft re-set that helps with the static/popping/clipping. This does not fix the actual problem, which is that Apple TV is a piece of shit that can't send a clean signal, but it may alleviate the symptoms without having to do a full re-set.

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