Navigation & Audio USB Experiments
#1
#2
#3
I wondered about that. Shame because there's really no reason why the software couldn't accept more than one usb device.
#6
I ask because USB ports likely have similar capabilities across the auto industry. If other car makers don't support NTFS, it's doubtful that MINI would add their own support for it. I would not have expected USB hubs to be supported. An auto maker would provide their own multiple USB ports. They don't want a customer to plug in some generic USB hub and expect it to work.
#7
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#8
I ask because USB ports likely have similar capabilities across the auto industry. If other car makers don't support NTFS, it's doubtful that MINI would add their own support for it. I would not have expected USB hubs to be supported. An auto maker would provide their own multiple USB ports. They don't want a customer to plug in some generic USB hub and expect it to work.
The same would be true of USB hubs. It would be difficult to reduce the capabilities of the operating system.
In this case it allowed the powered USB hub, which is great, it is one way to power devices that exceed the capacity of the USB port, it recognized that another device was plugged in, which suggests the operating system is capable of handling multiple devices, then removed the first device from the list, which seems like programming. My guess is that limiting the number of devices to one greatly simplifies the UI.
Last edited by hammerhands; 10-31-2014 at 03:37 AM.
#9
NTFS is 100% proprietary to Microsoft. They have not released the specification. NTFS embeds security features Microsoft treats as a trade secret.
What non-Windows support you see out there has been reversed engineered and is generally read only.
Fat32 supports drives up to 2tb, is a published standard, and is the #1 formatting system in the world. This is why all commercially available USB drives come pre-formatted in Fat32.
You had to use your Windows PC to reformat that drive in NTFS.
BTW, I would not recommend doing that. NTFS was not designed for portable drives and you will have security related file access issues on other PCs if you are not careful.
What non-Windows support you see out there has been reversed engineered and is generally read only.
Fat32 supports drives up to 2tb, is a published standard, and is the #1 formatting system in the world. This is why all commercially available USB drives come pre-formatted in Fat32.
You had to use your Windows PC to reformat that drive in NTFS.
BTW, I would not recommend doing that. NTFS was not designed for portable drives and you will have security related file access issues on other PCs if you are not careful.
#11
#12
When I discovered that it could not do FLAC, I was pretty disappointed. I was hoping to not have to transcode everything that I wanted to play in the MINI. Would have been so nice to not have to keep up with multiple formats based on where I need to play it.
One thing I've noticed is that it doesn't seem to like encoding over 192 Kbs. The files will show in the menu with song title, but just not play when selected. No message displayed, just silence.
Anyone else encounter that or is it maybe a combination of multiple factors?
#13
You had a USB drive that came pre-formatted in NTFS?
That would be unusual.
Check out
http://www.howtogeek.com/177529/htg-explains-why-are-removable-drives-still-using-fat32-instead-of-ntfs/
Except for the need to support files larger than 4gb, it just makes no sense to format portable drives in anything other than Fat32.
That would be unusual.
Check out
http://www.howtogeek.com/177529/htg-explains-why-are-removable-drives-still-using-fat32-instead-of-ntfs/
Except for the need to support files larger than 4gb, it just makes no sense to format portable drives in anything other than Fat32.
#16
#17
What features are supported are largely determined by which chipsets they are using. For this type of consumer product, the audio formats, USB control, and file access are functions embedded in interface chips.
#21
#22
I would be interested to know who can play FLAC files! If we can pinpoint the requirements.
I will have to see if I can post my software versions.
I tried again and it does not consider them to be music files. I wonder if I can put them in a wav container.
120 GB USB drive formatted with EXT3
not supported
I will have to see if I can post my software versions.
I tried again and it does not consider them to be music files. I wonder if I can put them in a wav container.
120 GB USB drive formatted with EXT3
not supported
#24
I would be interested to know who can play FLAC files! If we can pinpoint the requirements. I will have to see if I can post my software versions. I tried again and it does not consider them to be music files. I wonder if I can put them in a wav container. 120 GB USB drive formatted with EXT3 not supported