How do I solve this issue of not getting sound when I record even when I switch the mic on&off these no sound at all. When I start recording the music sound just cuts. I even restated it several times still nothing

Yes it does, when you are doing screen recording and you want it to record the mic as well, press and hold the screen recording button in the Action Center and youll get a toggle to turn the mic on and off.


Download Audio Book On Iphone


Download File 🔥 https://cinurl.com/2yGAqF 🔥



When i go to iMovie to edit the video, sound disappear. Sound on camera videos remain, but sound on screen recordings are gone as soon as they are imported to a new project(even though, they are there when watching the video in the camera roll).

However the voice over works all the time but if I play any video which has an audio then it does not capture any audio (embedded audio from video or voice over) for the duration while video is playing.

After I updated to iOS 11.1 screen recording webinars from my iPad now also includes the audio. I can now just long press the record icon, turn mic audio on, tap the record button and switch to the browser or webinar app. Whoop!

I'm having the exact same issue! I updated to the lastest IOS update and thought it would fix it but it hasn't. I'e asked people around me and they said the issue got fixed for them in the latest update. That's what I'm confused on. Also, does restarting the phone help when you record external audio as well as? I tried that and the mic only picks up my voice. Any feedback would help, thank you!

My issues is that I know how to record audio and it works BUT when you post the video anywhere the audio disappears! It is there in camera roll, but if you post to facebook, it is silent. What's the deal?

Since one of the iOS 14 updates, about 6 months ago, after a few uses in the car, iOS will not see that the iPhone has been unplugged from the car, and as a result you will get no audio out of your speakers and attempting to plug the phone back into the car will cause a "Only one accessory can be used at a time" error to pop up on the screen.

Checking your sound output settings will show that the iPhone thinks it's still playing audio out the dock connector, and there is no option to play audio out the speaker. The ear piece will still work, bluetooth or other headphones will still work, however lighting devices won't work. There is also no interface sounds like keyboard clicks, lock sounds, and whatnot when in this state.

It's very clearly a bug, and there have been several iOS updates since that have failed to address the issue. Perhaps it's more common on older phones, however it is not related to the phone hardware, or phone data, as I've had both my hardware replaced and this happens with a fresh or restored iPhone, using multiple authentic Apple cables.

It is an issue because it's been reported by hundreds of users. It's less prevalent on newer devices since this kind of issue is usually one of timing. iOS doesn't detect that it's gotten unplugged from the car likely because something in iOS misses the message that the device got unplugged, and only rechecks everything after a reboot, or doing a force quit of springboard by holding the home button at the shutdown slider.

It's very likely your car is choosing to use the wired connection for audio and bypassing the Bluetooth connection when plugged in. It explains why you can hear audio just fine when only connected to via Bluetooth.

The iphone is connected to the car via bluetooth. I can play music through siri & apple music but I haven't tried listening to music with the phone plugged-in via the wire. I know the siri directions broadcast over the stereo speakers via bluetooth, but when I plug-in the cable to charge the phone, the verbal directions stop. When I unplug the cable, I get verbal directions again over the stereo.

I unpaired the car and iphone. Had each device forget/delete connection. Re-paired and tried navigation again. I only get verbal directions over bluetooth. The instant I plug-in cable to charge, I no longer get verbal commands.

Does that mean that the iPhone 7 will accept high resolution audio files? (I'm talking 24 bit, 192.000 kHz files with bitrates up around 9,216 kbps, like those that you can purchase from Pono Music or HD Tracks).

Just wanted to offer a correction: Apple headphones and the Apple Lightning to 3.5 mm AUX Adapter do not contain DACs. The DAC is a custom-built Cirrus Logic DAC inside the iPhone that can technically handle 24-bit Integer / 96kHz conversion, but iOS limits this to 48kHz. Without a separate app, you cannot store or play files above 48kHz. You can, oddly enough, store 32-bit Floating Point IEEE files on the iPhone though.

They have simply re-routed the electrodes that connected the former auxiliary jack to the lightning connector. The sound quality is EXACTLY the same. It ticks me off when Apple themselves claims it to be an audible improvement when it can be scientifically proven to not be the case.

The only way you can use an external DAC is via Lightning to USB, rarely built into headphone cables, and usually not as good of quality as the one built-in to the iPhone, believe it or not. The Audeze may be an exception, but I'm skeptical of its DAC actually being better than the iPhone as far as sound quality is concerned.

BTW, you may want to watch some of the videos regarding the PONO Player. It seems like a scam to a true audiophile, and even if you're not a true audiophile (whatever the heck a "true audiophile" may be), it's still vastly overpriced. I don't own one, however, so if you know something I don't, let me know.

If you want to listen to high-fidelity music on the go, just downsample your music to 24-bit Integer / 48kHz or 44.1kHz, you will lose no audible quality if you do the conversion correctly, you'll decrease the file size, and it can then be played natively on the iPhone. For the best ALAC conversion, do not use Audacity or XLD or Foobar2000, use either Adobe Audition on Mac ONLY, iTunes, or Apple's ProLogicX. I'm an audio engineer, I kind of know what I'm talking about.

P.S. If you want to convert a file to ALAC in iTunes, try to already have the file be in 24-bit or 32-bit Integer, 32-bit Float files get converted to 16-bit Integer (CD-quality). You cannot hear above 22050 Hz. A file with a sampling rate of 44.1kHz has an audible range half that number, so 44.1kHz sample = 22.050kHz audible. Beyond that, you're simply storing more data that is virtually useless. The better factor is actually bit depth, so 16-bit vs 24-bit and so on. 16-bit provides 96 dB, 24-bit provides 144, and beyond that is again virtually useless for music. If you downsample your music correctly, 24-bit Integer/44.1kHz is all you need.

I just purchased a 7 yesterday, loaded my music on. I noticed that, yes, iTunes does not transfer all High-Res ALAC files, BUT, it does transfer, and the iPhone 7 DOES playback 48/24 ALAC files. So, at least the resolution compatibility goes a bit higher than CD 44/16. Maybe older devices do this as well, and it's quite possible the ceiling has been 48/24 for some time. Wanted to share my experience. 152ee80cbc

acid rap zip download

3d piano game download

vibrant rudram chanting ringtone download