2014 Nissan Quest Owner's Manual - Page 241

2014 Nissan Quest Manual

Page 241 highlights

devices, USB hard drives and iPod® players. Some USB devices may not be supported by this system. . Partitioned USB devices may not be played correctly. . Some characters used in other languages (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) are not displayed properly on display. Using English language characters with a USB device is recommended. General notes for USB use: Refer to your device manufacturer's owner information regarding the proper use and care of the device. Notes for iPod® use: iPod® is a trademark of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. . Improperly plugging in the iPod® may cause a checkmark to be displayed on and off (flickering). Always make sure that the iPod® is connected properly. An iPod nano® (1st Generation) may remain in fast forward or rewind mode if it is connected during a seek operation. In this case, please manually reset the iPod®. An iPod nano® (2nd Generation) will continue to fast-forward or rewind if it is disconnected during a seek operation. ... An incorrect song title may appear when the Play Mode is changed while using an iPod nano® (2nd Generation) Audiobooks may not play in the same order as they appear on an iPod®. Large video files cause slow responses in an iPod®. The vehicle center display may momentarily black out, but will soon recover. If an iPod® automatically selects large video files while in the shuffle mode, the vehicle center display may momentarily black out, but will soon recover. . . Compressed Audio Files (MP3/WMA/ AAC) Explanation of terms: . MP3 - MP3 is short for Moving Pictures Experts Group Audio Layer 3. MP3 is the most well known compressed digital audio file format. This format allows for near "CD quality" sound, but at a fraction of the size of normal audio files. MP3 conversion of an audio track can reduce the file size by approximately a 10:1 ratio (Sampling: 44.1 kHz, Bit rate: 128 kbps) with virtually no perceptible loss in quality. The compression reduces certain parts of sound that seem inaudible to most people. . . . . . WMA - Windows Media Audio (WMA) is a compressed audio format created by Microsoft as an alternative to MP3. The WMA codec offers greater file compression than the MP3 codec, enabling storage of more digital audio tracks in the same amount of space when compared to MP3s at the same level of quality. AAC/M4A (if so equipped) - Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) is a lossy audio compression format. Audio files that have been encoded with AAC are generally smaller in size and deliver a higher quality of sound than MP3. Bit rate - Bit rate denotes the number of bits per second used by a digital music file. The size and quality of a compressed digital audio file is determined by the bit rate used when encoding the file. Sampling frequency - Sampling frequency is the rate at which the samples of a signal are converted from analog to digital (A/D conversion) per second. Multisession - Multisession is one of the methods for writing data to media. Writing data once to the media is called a single session, and writing more than once is called a multisession. 4-58 Monitor, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems

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4-58
Monitor, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
devices, USB hard drives and iPod
®
players.
Some USB devices may not be supported by
this system.
.
Partitioned USB devices may not be played
correctly.
.
Some characters used in other languages
(Chinese, Japanese, etc.) are not displayed
properly on display. Using English language
characters with a USB device is recom-
mended.
General notes for USB use:
Refer
to
your
device
manufacturer’s
owner
information regarding the proper use and care
of the device.
Notes for iPod
®
use:
iPod
®
is a trademark of Apple Inc., registered in
the U.S. and other countries.
.
Improperly plugging in the iPod
®
may cause
a checkmark to be displayed on and off
(flickering). Always make sure that the iPod
®
is connected properly.
.
An iPod nano
®
(1st Generation) may remain
in
fast
forward
or
rewind
mode
if
it
is
connected during a seek operation. In this
case, please manually reset the iPod
®
.
.
An iPod nano
®
(2nd Generation) will con-
tinue
to
fast-forward
or
rewind
if
it
is
disconnected during a seek operation.
.
An incorrect song title may appear when the
Play Mode is changed while using an iPod
nano
®
(2nd Generation)
.
Audiobooks may not play in the same order
as they appear on an iPod
®
.
.
Large video files cause slow responses in an
iPod
®
.
The
vehicle
center
display
may
momentarily black out, but will soon recover.
.
If an iPod
®
automatically selects large video
files while in the shuffle mode, the vehicle
center display may momentarily black out,
but will soon recover.
Compressed Audio Files (MP3/WMA/
AAC)
Explanation of terms:
.
MP3 — MP3 is short for Moving Pictures
Experts Group Audio Layer 3. MP3 is the
most well known compressed digital audio
file format. This format allows for near “CD
quality” sound, but at a fraction of the size of
normal audio files. MP3 conversion of an
audio
track
can
reduce
the
file
size
by
approximately a 10:1 ratio (Sampling: 44.1
kHz, Bit rate: 128 kbps) with virtually no
perceptible loss in quality. The compression
reduces certain parts of sound that seem
inaudible to most people.
.
WMA — Windows Media Audio (WMA) is a
compressed audio format created by Micro-
soft as an alternative to MP3. The WMA
codec offers greater file compression than
the MP3 codec, enabling storage of more
digital audio tracks in the same amount of
space when compared to MP3s at the same
level of quality.
.
AAC/M4A (if so equipped) — Advanced
Audio
Coding
(AAC)
is
a
lossy
audio
compression format. Audio files that have
been
encoded
with
AAC
are
generally
smaller in size and deliver a higher quality
of sound than MP3.
.
Bit rate — Bit rate denotes the number of
bits per second used by a digital music file.
The size and quality of a compressed digital
audio file is determined by the bit rate used
when encoding the file.
.
Sampling frequency — Sampling frequency
is the rate at which the samples of a signal
are converted from analog to digital (A/D
conversion) per second.
.
Multisession — Multisession is one of the
methods for writing data to media. Writing
data once to the media is called a single
session,
and
writing
more
than
once
is
called a multisession.