I would really like to have a player (open source?) that offers volume boost, silence skip and variable speed playback. I think that if the project had those features, it would bea great bonus. Those features could almost be considered table stakes.

(Edit: while looking for Android solutions for this, I found that there is a setting in the developers options to turn off absolute volume, which means that I have two ways to control the volume: the headphones and the phone. I can find a better suited volume this way.)


Download Equalizer Volume Boost


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I ask this cause the **** at ROG gave me an $800+ monitor with speakers that weren't properly "boosted" (similar to what Laptops do to get better quality and sound level out of Laptop Speakers, by providing a secondary program). However, these monitor speakers were litterly so low in sound level that they were essentially unusable, let alone giving high sound.

So, I found "Letasoft Sound Booster" program which nicely boosts the audio on my system and or course the Monitor Speakers A LOT.

Anyway, will Equalizer APO also boost the sound, not just equalize it? (though yes I know equalizing does do a "little" boosting depending on setting, but I'm asking about actual sound increase, like anywhere from 100-500 Times)

Thanks, the Amplification Nob works perfectly to boost the sound.... Wee.

No need to buy stupid paid program like Letasoft Sound Booster, FXSound Enhancer, or the free DeskFX Audio Effect Processor that you have to activate manually.

I have a first-generation MacBook, which are notorious for having a very low max sound output level when using the built-in speakers. I'm looking for a good software solution (i.e., no suggestions for headphones/external speakers) to boost the maximum sound output-level.

My main criteria is this: I don't want something that's app-specific, such as using VLC's built-in volume control + equalizer. I'm looking for something that either works system-wide for all sound output, or can be used with any app.

While the Audio Hijack solution works okay, what I'd really like to find is a control panel or background app that puts an icon in the menu bar with either a system-wide toggle or an app-selector to toggle the volume boost for the chosen app.

For a hardware solution check out HeadRoom's Total Airhead or Total Bithead, which besides amping up the volume, it will help the sound quality if you don't have the most efficient headphones. This is very dependent on what headphones you have.

Apple was concerned that if the iTunes equalizer, as an example, had access to the full capacity of Intel's codec, (which Apple can't mess with), and if a user set the low frequencies to boom-box levels, it could end up being a one-time-only event. Indeed, the engineers' caution has the plug-in adjust the volume of the startup chime to adapt to whatever DSP settings might be in force during a boot.

So much for the history lesson. Before even thinking of doing anything I suggest, visit Apple's site to verify you have installed all of the appropriate Firmware Updates for your MacBook. Doing so could provide the simplest solution possible. Although it wasn't true for everyone, many MacBook owners reported Firmware Update 1.2 cured their low volume issues. (Not all updates are apropriate for all models.)

The change should take effect right away, but if not, then restart and check your audio settings in System Preferences. If you can't detect any improvement in volume, then the prudent thing to do is to restore the hacked Info.plist with the backup copy:

When I ran Debain Woody, with MPlayer on an original 2001 iBook, it would set the volume to "max" each time it quit, yet the slider would be in the middle the next time you started it. After a few iterations of sliding it up, and down, and wondering why it kept getting louder, I blew the speakers (during a reboot). So, I think it's possible, try using the mac version of MPlayer, but do you really want to do it?

My personal experience is thus: I tested out the lite version, rebooted, saw that it worked, uninstalled using the script provided by the dev. Installed the Mac App Store version and installed the driver and rebooted. It works. The drawback I've noticed with this solution is that the Mac system volume control becomes non functional except for toggling mute on and off. In order to adjust the volume, you have to use the SoundBooster volume slider from the menubar. Unfortunately, the App doesn't have any hotkeys or shortcuts or command line access to make changing the volume more accessible.

Boom 2 for Mac is an award-winning pro audio app that gives you finer, higher precision control over all the audio on your Mac, with a cutting-edge 31 band equalizer, an unbeatable volume booster, and a host of unique features for a pristine stereo sound experience. Features that truly enrich the sound experience on your Mac: A Personalized Stereo Sound Experience with the Advanced 31-Band Equalizer: The state-of-the-art higher fidelity equalizer gives you complete control to adjust every minute detail of the audio, to make the stereo experience truly unique and exactly the way you want it to sound.

Experience Powerful Sound with the Volume Booster: Increase the volume beyond your system's regular limit to enjoy the true power of sound. Crafted Audio Effects, to Shape Your Sound: Breathe new life into your sound, by adding ambience, increasing fidelity, shifting the pitch, and more. Superior Stereo Sound Control: Increase the width of the stereo field and adjust the balance of the left and right channels, with the easy-to-use interface. Sample Rate Control: Adjust the sample rate of the output device for pristine audio rendering, on higher-end audio devices.

With the Music equalizer, you can fine-tune specific frequencies of the sound spectrum. You can customize the sound for different genres, rooms in your home, or specific speakers. You can choose from more than 20 presets of the most commonly used equalizer settings, or adjust the settings manually and save your customized settings as a preset that you can use again.

The numbers along the bottom (and top on in the picture above) denote frequencies. Sounds with a low frequency (the numbers towards the left) are bass sounds, high frequencies (towards the right) are treble. As you move a slider towards the top, the system will increase the volume of sounds at this frequency. Conversely, moving a slider downwards will reduce the volume.

For my live set, at times I need a clean boost to put my solos up in the mix. Sometimes the guitar tone is very clean, round, and jazz-like, so I want to be sure the manner of boosting allows the signal to stay totally clean.

What's better for this: a booster or an EQ pedal? For example, two pedals I'm considering for this purpose are the MXR MC-401 Boost/Line Driver and the MXR M-108 Graphic EQ. I'm not tied to MXR pedals or anything, but those are general examples of what I'm thinking of.

For a volume boost, you want it in the loop. If you wanted to hit the front end of the amp a little harder, you would want the booster. It won't make anything louder, just add a bit more gain. Though the EQ could do that as well, like I mentioned before.

A lot of guys like the boss, I don't use an EQ though. I don't play leads and just use a bifet preamp to give me a little more gain and essentially give me an extra gain channel without changing the volume of the amp.

You have the ability to boost your signal, increase your volume and adjust your EQ. You can set it as just a buffer, just a booster, just an EQ, all kinds of options. Kinda hard to find, but here is one-

good thing with eq pedal is you can boost the mids which requires less of a level boost to cut through a mix. especially useful in 2 guitar bands. i personally usually just use a mxr micro amp in loop or in front of amp that is set and will remain set clean. i usually have lot of mids in my regular tone so to cut through i just need a small clean volume boost.

This is very true. A good EQ pedal is a swiss army knife of tone. IMO, there's really no reason to buy a booster unless you can't afford a good EQ (and then you'd buy an EHX LBP-1 or Screaming Bird or maybe a Dano overdrive).

I do have an Behringer 7-band EQ. I definitely agree that it's supremely helpful. The trouble is that for my live set, I've already dedicated it to a particular song (despite the fact that it's a bad pedal. I think the sliders are deteriorating because the various band signals jump in and out). Ideally, I'd get a better quality EQ pedal to dedicate to that song, and I'd still need to find another pedal to boost my solos.

Ok, I think I'll get an EQ pedal for the boosts, and maybe I'll try building the mosfet booster. I've recently been wanting to try building a pedal, so that could be a good first project. I know it's what they suggest at the DIYstompboxes forum. ff782bc1db

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