#6 in Mascara
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Reddit mentions of 3.5mm Aux Cable for Car/Home Stereo, Speaker, Headphone
Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 5
We found 5 Reddit mentions of 3.5mm Aux Cable for Car/Home Stereo, Speaker, Headphone. Here are the top ones.
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PREMIUM SOUND TRANSMISSION: The aux cord for iPhone 8 was built-in Advanced DAC Chip and gold-plated connectors ensures better contact and the lossless sound transmission and make the sound more pureProviding you a fantastic music trip when using this aux cord!STRONG COMPATIBILITY: The aux cable for car is compatible with iPhone 11 Pro Max/11 Pro/11/XS/XS Max/XR/X/8/8 Plus/7/7 Plus / 6 6 Plus / 6S 6S Plus/5 / iPad, etc.You can easily play audio from your iPhone on your car stereo, headphone, Hi-Fi, computer stereo, MP3, bluetooth speaker with 3.5mm aux ports or other 3.5mm-compatible output devices.PLUG & PLAY: No need any driver or adapter, just plug and play. Easy to connect and use.
Specs:
UPDATE
Hey guys, love all the comments and Questions, here is some info for those who care and want to know.
Products Used*
Touchscreen Bought Mine at MCM electronics.
Raspberry Pi2
Speakers
Amp
Keyboard
Software Running
Get Noobs on a SD/MicroSD card here
Use Noobs to boot and install Rasbian
Install KODI from add remove programs or terminal "sudo apt-get install kodi"
Install NPR and VevoTV in Kodi.
Cool Idea
User /benjimons has a really cool idea on his screen showing his webcams and other good info
User/agent-squirrel mentioned Dashing for a cool UI, I looked a little into it and it seems pretty cool
Dog Info
I don't know HomeDepots official dog policy, but yes, he goes with me all the time there, employees all love him, he is NOT a service dog, and lots of Dogs are in there. I usually see this in HomeDepots that are deeper in residential areas, not so much in a more industrial area...
Thanks, he's a great pup, we call him WiFi because of his Antenna's
Raspberry Pi 2 Model B
Supports CEC. Comes with 4x USB 2.0 slots, an HDMI, quad core ARM A7 processor, 1 GB RAM, and an ethernet port. Also has GPIO pins but I don't know of any Kodi related uses for them. It is an extremely low power device (uses about $3 worth of electricity per year) and requires nothing to keep it cool (e.g., no fans blaring in the middle of your favorite movie).
Base cost is $35. Requires a microSD card, an HDMI cable, and a microUSB charger, all of which can be purchased for approximately $5 each. An existing microUSB charger, such as from your cell phone or a device like a Kindle or Chromecast can be used, of course. Optional components include a case ($10-$20 or 3D print your own), USB wifi dongle ($10+), and an external hard drive ($50+). A few companies put out bundles that include a Raspberry Pi board and various components such as this basic one and this more complete one. A wireless keyboard ($20+) can also be handy. Product links are provided as examples; there may be better deals or smarter purchases to be had.
You'll then want to use a minimalistic Linux distro such as OpenELEC or OSMC, both of which are designed specifically to run Kodi and have optimized builds for a Raspberry Pi. OpenELEC seems to be more popular and is what I use myself. Installation is easy -- you just download and write to your SD card (oh yeah, you might need an SD card reader, $5). If you'd like you can also install a "real" Linux distro and install Kodi in that as you would on a regular desktop computer. You can either store your media on an external hard drive connected to the Raspberry Pi or on a separate computer or NAS and share your files over your LAN.
Pros:
Cons:
The Raspberry Pi by itself is just a board. Like a PC, you need other stuff to make it work -- at the very least, a power supply and an SD card on which to install the OS. A kit like this gives you the power supply and a case, or you can go bigger and get a kit that includes power, case, wifi, hdmi cable, and a preloaded SD card. For htpc purposes, you don't need a kit like this, which includes a bunch of components that you aren't going to use (LEDs, breadboard, breakout cables, wires, etc -- stuff that you'd use if you were going to use the pi to build projects, but is unnecessary for a media player).
Don't bother with any heatsinks or fans. The RPi doesn't need them even for overclocking. Case quality can vary, but even the cheap cases are generally decent. You'll want at least a 2A power supply, especially if you intend to plug in external HDDs that don't have their own power source. And if you don't go with a kit that includes an SD card, make sure you buy a good quality card instead. That's your only storage on the device, so you want it to be as reliable as possible. Which means no bargain basement, "10 for a dollar" cheap SD cards. Go with name brands like Samsung.
And finally, /r/raspberry_pi. They're big on the Zero right now, but I'd suggest you go with a 2 B instead (quad core and more RAM makes it worth the extra cost).
For what it's worth I installed RasPlex on an old Raspberry Pi B and it streamed fine from my server. If I recall I might have had to turn down the stream rate (or video quality or SOMETHING) but that model only has 512mb memory but a new one like this would likely run like a champ.
Not sure what kind of processing power you'll need on your server. Mine is currently an older quad core pc with plenty of memory but I'd like to put it on an OLDER Pentium 4 box just to see how she does. I would get something at least equivalent to an i5 simply so you if you want to use it as a regular PC you can do so while simultaneously streaming media via Plex.
http://www.amazon.com/Raspberry-Starter-Compact-Case--Power-Supply/dp/B00TFV5QTA/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1449528246&sr=8-5&keywords=raspberry+pi
It's nice to have a case for when you're just experimenting, and a power supply.