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Wiki > Main > ManualMainMenu (compare)
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Difference: ManualMainMenu (r49 vs. r48)
|
| Archos Player/Studio | Press the MENU button |
| Archos Recorder | Press the F1 button |
| Archos Ondio | Press and hold the MODE button |
| iriver H1xx and H3xx series | Press the A-B Button |
All options in Rockbox are controlled via the Main Menu. Some select settings from the Main Menu can also be control via the Quick Menu (Recorder, iriver, versions only).
Note: all settings controlled by the Main Menu are persistently stored on the unit. However, Rockbox does not spin up the disk solely for the purpose of saving settings, but instead will save them when it spins up the disk the next time, for example when refilling the audio buffer or navigating through the file browser. Changes to settings may therefore not be saved unless the jukebox is shut down safely.
The Main Menu is structured as follows:
If the 'save a list of recently created bookmarks' option is enabled, you can view a list of several recent bookmarks here and select one to jump straight to that track. This option is 'off' by default.
The volume at which your music is played. The volume setting uses a decibel scale:
| Model | Minimum volume | Maximum volume |
|---|---|---|
| Archos Player | -78 dB | +18 dB |
| Archos Recorders and Ondios | -100 dB | +12 dB |
| iriver H100 and H300 series | -84 dB | 0 dB |
A word of explanation, focusing on the iriver jukeboxes by way of example: 0 dB indicates the maximum output that the player can handle without clipping. Slightly softer is -1, then -2, etc. The units used are decibels. Thus, the scale is an offset in decibels from the loudest non-clipped volume. Note that the difference between decibels is not uniform, because the dB scale is a logarithmic, not a linear, scale.
The Bass setting controls the low frequencies during music playback.
Settings:
| Archos jukeboxes | Bass can be increased (>0), and decreased (<0). A setting of 0 means that low frequencies are unaltered (flat response). |
|---|---|
| iriver jukeboxes | The Bass setting can be used to increase (but not decrease) frequencies below 300Hz. Bass boost can be set from 0 to 24 dB in increments of 2 dB. A setting of 0 means that low frequencies are unaltered (flat response). |
The Treble setting controls the high frequencies during music playback.
Settings:
| Archos jukeboxes | Treble can be increased (>0), or decreased (<0). A setting of 0 means that high frequencies are unaltered (flat response). |
|---|---|
| iriver players | The Treble setting can be used to increase (but not decrease) frequencies above [1.5kHz or 3kHz]. Treble boost can be set from 0 to 6 dB in increments of 2 dB. A setting of 0 means that high frequencies are unaltered (flat response). |
The Balance control determines whether the sound level is equal in both channels, or 'panned' to either the left or right. The Balance control works by determining how much of the volume is generated by the left or right channel of the sound. The default, 0, means that the left and right outputs are equal in volume. Negative numbers increase the volume of the left channel relative to the right, while positive numbers increase the volume of the right channel relative to the left.
This option controls the on-board mixing facilities of your player. A stereo audio signal consists of two channels, left and right. Available options are:
| Stereo | Do not mix the signal. |
|---|---|
| Mono | Mix both channels down to mono and send the mixed signal back to both. |
| Custom | Mix both channels in a variable fashion, using the value set under "Stereo Width". |
| Mono Left | Plays the left channel in both stereo channels. |
| Mono Right | Plays the right channel in both stereo channels. |
| Karaoke | Removes all sound that is the same in both channels. Since most vocals are recorded in this way to make the artist sound central, this often (but not always) has the effect of removing the voice track from a song. |
Note: The above Channel features are available but not confirmed as working yet on iriver.
This option controls the perceived '*width*' of the sound. The larger the value chosen, the '*wider*' the sound seems. If you imagine having two speakers, increasing the Stereo width sounds similar to placing the speakers further apart. The larger the value set, the larger the time difference heard between the left and right channels. The possible range is 0% (equal to "Mono") to 255%. The default setting is 100% (equal to "Stereo").
This equalizer is a parametric equalizer. The parametric EQ is composed of five different EQ bands:
| Band(s) | Type of EQ | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Low shelf filter | A low shelf filter boosts or lowers all frequencies below the designated cutoff point. The "bass" control on most home or car stereos is an example of a low shelf filter. The low shelf filter in Rockbox is more flexible than a simple "bass" control, however, because it lets you adjust not only the amount of gain that is applied. Rockbox lets you control the amount of gain that is applied (i.e., the amount that the bass is boost or cut) too, but Rockbox also allows you to adjust the "cutoff" frequency where the shelving starts to take effect. For example, a cutoff frequency of 50 Hz will adjust only very low frequencies. A cutoff frequency of 200 Hz, on the other hand, will adjust a much wider range of bass frequencies. |
| 1-3 | Peaking filters | Peaking EQs boost or low a center frequency that you select, as well as the frequencies within a certain distance of that center. Graphic equalizers in home stereos are usually peaking filters. The peaking EQs on Rockbox's parametric equalizer let you adjust three different parameters for each EQ band 1 through 3. The "cutoff" parameter controls the center frequency that is adjusted by that EQ band. The "gain" parameter controls how much each band is adjusted. Positive numbers make the EQ band louder, while negative numbers make that EQ band quieter. Finally, the "Q" parameter controls how wide or narrow each EQ band is. Higher Q values will affect a narrow band of frequencies, while lower EQ values will affect a wider band of frequencies. |
| 4 | High shelf filter | A high shelf filter boosts or lowers all frequencies above a designated cutoff point. The "treble" control on most home or car stereos is an example of a high shelf filter. The high shelf filter is adjusted the same way as the low shelf filter, except that it works on the high end of the frequency spectrum rather than the low end. |
So, as a general guide, EQ band 0 should be used for lows, EQ bands 1 through 3 should be used for mids, and EQ band 4 should be used for highs.
It is generally preferable to cut frequencies than to boost frequencies. This is true of any EQ. Boosting frequencies adds noise and can cause clipping. So, for example, if your music sounds too dull, experiment with cutting bass or low midrange frequencies and adjusting the overall volume rather than boosting high frequencies.
The equalizer can be accessed from different places in Rockbox. First, the equalizer can be accessed through the Sound Settings submenu on the Main Menu.. Second, the equalizer can be accessed from the WPS Context Menu.
Sets the EQ status:
| Yes | Turns on the EQ. |
| No | Turns off the EQ. |
Selecting an EQ preset will turn the Enable EQ setting to ON.
This submenu invokes a Graphical User Interface (GUI) in which you can set all of the parameters of bands 0 through 4 of the parametric EQ. The graphical interface looks like this:

To adjust the graphic EQ, use the following buttons:
| Button | Function |
|---|---|
| UP and DOWN | Selects the EQ band to be adjusted. |
| LEFT and RIGHT | Lowers or raises the selected parameter in small increments (cutoff, gain, or Q). |
| PLAY + LEFT or RIGHT | Lowers or raises the selected parameter in larger increments. |
| NAVI/joystick press | Cycles through the parameters that can be adjusted (cutoff, gain and Q). |
| OFF/Stop | Exits the Graphic EQ. |
It may take a few seconds for EQ changes to take effect. It will take longer for EQ changes to take effect if the Crossfade feature is enabled.
If you are not comfortable adjusting all of the parameters of the parametric EQ, you can use the Simple EQ Settings submeu. This submenu allows to adjust the gain of each of the five bands of the equalizer without have to worry about adjusting the "cutoff" or "Q" parameters. This is a non-GUI menu.
The Advanced EQ Settings submenu allows you to adjust the same parameters as the Graphic EQ using a non-GUI interface.
Saves custom EQ settings. Select this option, choose a name for your custom EQ, and press PLAY to save.
This option allows you to browse custom EQ settings that you have saved (or custom EQ settings that you have loaded onto your jukebox).
This menu is for configuring settings related to audio playback.
Options:
| Yes | Shuffles the contents of current directory or playlist |
|---|---|
| No | Does not shuffle the contents of the current directory or playlist |
This menu is for configuring settings related to repeating of directories or playlists.
Options:
| Off | Current directory or playlist is not repeated. |
|---|---|
| One | Repeat the current song. |
| All | Repeat the current directory or playlist. |
| Shuffle | When the current directory or playlist has finished playing, it will be shuffled and then repeated. |
This setting controls what happens when you select a file while shuffle mode is on.
Options:
| Yes | The file you selected will be played first. |
|---|---|
| No | A random file in the directory will be played first. |
Sets whether Rockbox will resume playing at the point where you shut off.
Options:
| Yes | On startup, the jukebox automatically resumes playing at the point where it was last stopped. |
|---|---|
| No | On startup, the jukebox does not automatically resume. |
Earlier versions of Rockbox had an "Ask" setting, which would ask whether to resume when the jukebox was turned on. This setting has been eliminated because it was redundant. If resume is set to "No," simply pressing PLAY (iriver), ON (Archos Studio/Recorder) or MODE (Archos Ondio) will resume from the point where the jukebox was stopped before shutdown.
The smallest step, in seconds, you want to fast forward or rewind in a track. Options are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 45, or 60 seconds.
How fast you want search (ffwd/rew) to accelerate when you hold down the button.
Options:
| Off | No acceleration during fast forward or rewind. |
|---|---|
| 2x/1s | The search speed will double once for every second the button is held. |
| 2x/5s | The search speed will double once for every 5 seconds the button is held. |
iriver H1xx: The iriver series H1xx has options to set doubling of search speed between every 1and 10 seconds, in increment of 1 second.
This setting allows you to control how much music is stored in the player's memory whilst playing a song, acting as a buffer against shock or playback problems.
On Archos, this can be set to a value between 0 and 7 seconds. On the iriver H1xx series, the anti-skip buffer can be set to various values between 5 seconds and 10 minutes.
The player transfers the selected amount of the forthcoming song into its memory at high speed whilst you are playing the song. It keeps a 'rolling' buffer, i.e. keep feeding more of the forthcoming song into memory as it goes along. In the event of the player being knocked, shaken or jogged heavily, Rockbox might not be able to read the hard disk. Rockbox will retry over and over again until it succeeds, but may eventually reach the end of the memory buffer and has to stop playing while waiting for more data from the disk. The anti-skip setting tells Rockbox how much extra buffer memory to spare to handle this situation. This setting therefore allows you to reduce the chances of there being a gap or pause during playback of songs, at the expense of using less memory for the regular buffering.
Recommendations
Having a large anti-skip buffer tends to use more power, and may reduce your battery life. It is recommended to always use the lowest possible setting that allows correct and continuous playback.
This setting enables and disables a fade effect when you pause or stop playing a song.
Options:
| Yes | Your music will fade from your set volume down to zero when you press STOP or PAUSE. |
|---|---|
| No | Your music will not fade out when you press STOP or PAUSE. |
This setting enables a cross-fader. At the end of a song, the song will fade out as the next song fades in, creating a smooth transition between songs.
The crossfade setting is particularly effective when the player is set on shuffle.
This allows you to set the length of the cross-fade between songs.
Options:
| Enable crossfade | If set to OFF, crossfade is disabled. If set to ALWAYS, songs will always cross-fade into one another. If set to SHUFFLE, crossfade is enabled when the shuffle feature is set to YES, but disabled otherwise. |
|---|---|
| Fade in delay | the length of time between when the crossfade process begins and when the new track begins to fade in |
| Fade in duration | the length of time, in seconds, that it takes your music to fade in |
| Fade out delay | the length of time between when the crossfade process begins and when the old track begins to fade out |
| Fade out duration | the length of time, in seconds, that it takes your music to fade out |
| Fade out mode | If set to Crossfade, one song will fade out and the next song will simultaneously fade in. If set to Mix, the ending song will continue to play as normal until its end, while the starting song will fade in from under it. Mix mode is not used for manual track skips, even if it is selected here. Note: The crossfade setting is particularly effective when the player is set on shuffle |
This allows you to control the replaygain function. The purpose of replaygain is to adjust the volume of the played songs so that they are equally loud, to avoid sudden changes in volume when changing between songs recorded at different volume levels. For this to work, the songs must have been processed by a program that adds replaygain information as ID3 tags (or vorbis tags for certain formats). Note that APEv2 tags are not currently supported.
This turns on/off the replaygain function.
Options:
| Yes | Turns ON replaygain |
|---|---|
| No | Turns OFF replaygain |
Avoid clipping of a song's waveform. If a song would clip during playback, the volume is lowered for that song. Replaygain information is needed for this to work.
Options:
| Yes | Prevent clipping of songs with replaygain information |
|---|---|
| No | Allow clipping of songs |
Choose the type of replaygain to apply.
Options:
| Album gain | Maintain a constant volume level between Albums, but keep any intentional volume variations between songs in an Album. (If album gain value is not available, uses track gain information). |
|---|---|
| Track gain | Maintain a constant volume level between Tracks. This works best when playing songs randomly. (if track gain value isn't available no replay gain is applied) |
| Track gain if shuffling | Maintains a constant volume between Tracks if shuffle mode is selected. Reverts to Album mode if shuffle is deselected. |
This allows you to adjust the volume when replaygain is applied. Replaygain often lowers the volume, sometimes quite much, so here you can compensate for that. Please note that a (large) positive pre-amp setting can cause clipping, unless prevent clipping is enabled. The pre-amp can be set to any decibel (dB) value between -12dB and +12dB, in increments of 0.1dB.
Crossfeed attempts to make the experience of listening to music on headphones more similar to listening to stereo speakers. When you listen to music through speakers, your right ear hears sound from the left speaker and vice versa. However, the sound from the left speaker reaches your left ear slightly later than the sound from your right ear, and vice versa. Moreover, when listening to speakers, you hear the direct sound from the speakers, but you also hear reflections of that sound as the sound waves bounce off of walls, floors, ceilings, etc. These reflections reach your ears slightly after the direct sound. The human ear and brain are very good at interpreting the timing differences between direct sounds and reflected sounds and using that information to identify the direction that the sound is coming from.
On the other hand, when listening to headphones, your ear hears only the direct sounds, and not reflections. Moreover, your left ear hears only the left channel and the right ear hears only the right channel. The result is that sound from headphones does not provide the same spatial cues to your ear and brain as speakers.
The crossfeed function uses an algorithm to feed a delayed and filtered portion of the signal from the right channel into the left channel and vice versa in order to simulate the spatial cues that the ear and brain receive when listening to non-headphone sources. The result is a better stereo image.
Options:
| On | Enables crossfeed. |
|---|---|
| Off | Disables crossfeed. |
This allows you to set the volume of the beep heard when skipping forward or backward between tracks.
Options:
| Off | Turn off the beep |
|---|---|
| Weak | Low volume beep |
| Moderate | Medium volume beep |
| Strong | Loud beep |
Enable/disable optical SPDIF output.
Options:
| On | Optical output is enabled. |
|---|---|
| Off | Optical output is disabled. |
Choose which ID3 tag to use if both are present.
Options:
| V2 then V1 | Uses the V2 tag if present, else the V1 tag |
|---|---|
| V1 then V2 | Uses the V1 tag if present, else the V2 tag |
If set to "Yes," when playback of a playlist or folder ends, Rockbox will create and play a new playlist of the next folder in the browser.
Options:
| Yes | Move to the next folder when the current folder is finished playing. |
|---|---|
| No | Do not move to the next folder when the current folder is finished playing. |
In order for the "Auto change directory" option to be effective, the "Repeat" option must be set to "Off."
Once you have reached the last folder on your player, this function will not loop and go back to the first folder again. It therefore only works up until you are in the last folder.
If set to yes, rockbox will track playcount for the runtime DB
This menu deals with options relating to how the file browser displays files.
If this option is enabled, files that start with a lower case letter will appear after the files that start with an upper case letter have all been listed. If disabled, then case will be ignored when sorting files.
This option controls how Rockbox sorts folders.
Options:
| Alphabetical (default) | Sorts folders alphabetically. |
|---|---|
| By date | Sorts folders in date order with the oldest folder first. |
| By newest date | Sorts folders in date order with the newest folder first. |
This option controls how Rockbox sorts files.
Options:
| Alphabetical (default) | Sorts files alphabetically. |
|---|---|
| By date | Sorts files in date order with the oldest folder first. |
| By newest date | Sorts files in date order with the newest folder first. |
| By type | Sorts files alphabetically by their type (such as .mp3) then alphabetically within each type. |
Controls which files are displayed in the directory browser.
Options:
| Music | Only directories and supported audio files (e.g., .mp3, .mp2, .mpa, .m3u, etc.) files are shown. Extensions on the files shown are stripped. Files and directories starting with "." or with the "hidden" flag set are hidden. |
|---|---|
| Playlists | Only shows directories and playlists, for simplified navigation. |
| ID3 database | For use with the ID3 database |
| Supported | All directories and files Rockbox understands are shown. Files and directories starting with "." or with the "hidden" flag set are hidden. |
| All | All files and directories are shown. File extensions are shown. No files or directories are hidden regardless of their attributes. |
A useful tutorial can be found on this Mistic River thread.
Determines where you go if you go to the directory browser from the While Playing Screen.
Options:
| Yes | When you enter the directory browser from the WPS, you will find yourself in the same directory as the currently playing file. |
|---|---|
| No | When you enter the directory browser from the WPS, you will stay in the same directory as you were last in. |
This indicates whether Rockbox will display an icon representing what type a file is on the left of the file in the browser.
Icons are only shown against supported file types.
Browse the fonts that reside in your /.rockbox directory. Selecting one will activate it. See the fonts page for further details about fonts.
Opens the file browser in the /.rockbox directory and displays all .wps files. Selecting one will activate it, stop will exit back to the menu. For further information about the WPS see How to Make a Custom WPS.
This submenu contains settings that relate to the display of the player.
The amount of time the backlight shines after a key press. If set to "Off," the backlight will not light when a button is pressed. If set to "On," the backlight will never shut off. If set to a time (1 to 90 seconds), the backlight will stay lit for that amount of time after a button press.
If set to 'Yes,' the backlight will stay on constantly while the charger cable is connected to a power source.
This option turns the backlight on for 25 seconds on either side of the start of a new track so that the display can be read to see song information.
The amount of time that the backlight will take to fade from off to on after a button is pressed. If set to "Off" the backlight will turn on immediately, with no fade in. Can also be set to 500ms, 1s or 2s.
The amount of time that the backlight will take to fade from on to off after a button is pressed. If set to "Off" the backlight will turn off immediately, with no fade out. Can also be set to 500kms, 1s, 2s, 3s, 4s, 5s or 10s.
Changes the contrast of your LCD display. Warning: Setting the contrast too dark or too light can make it hard to find this menu option again!
This setting lets you invert the colour of the whole screen, so now you get a black background and light text graphics.
Displays the screen so that the top of the display is nearest the buttons. This is sometimes useful when carrying the jukebox on a belt clip, or (on the Recorder) in a pocket for easy access to the headphone socket.
Select this option to have a bar of inverted text ('Bar' option) mark the current line in the File Browser rather than the default arrow to the left ('Pointer' option). This gives slightly more room for filenames.
Controls remote control settings.
Sets the time before the backlight fades out.
Adjust the remote LCD contrast.
Sets the remote LCD to normal or 'inverse' LCD view (white text on black background or vice versa)
Inverts the entire remote screen so it is upside down.
This allows you to set options controlling the scrolling of text on your players display. Text will only scroll if it is too large to fit on the screen, as might be seen with very long song or file names.
You can choose speeds between 0 and 15. The higher your choice, the faster the text will scroll across the screen. How well you can view fast-scrolling text will depend on the resolution of your screen.
This sets how long a delay is seen before text begins to scroll. Settings are between 0 and 2500ms, in increments of 100ms.
This sets how many pixels the text is displaced across the screen each time it scrolls. Options are between 1 and 160. A higher setting will make the scrolling look more jerky, especially if used with small fonts.
When scrolling a line, Rockbox can either scroll continuously to the left or scroll to the left until the end of the line is reached and then back until the beginning of the line is displayed at the left edge again. The Bidirectional Scroll limit determines how much longer than the display the scrolling line has to be, to switch from bidirectional scrolling to continuous scrolling. Setting it to 0% switches off bidirectional scrolling completely.
When enabled, you can pan the entire screen horizontally rather than waiting for individual lines to scroll. See QuickStart for the proper per-target button combination.
This sets how many pixels all the lines are displaced across the screen with each step of horizontal scrolling of the screen.
Allows you to change settings controlling the built in Status and Scroll bars.
This sets whether or not a scroll bar is seen on the left of your player's display if the files listed are too many to fit on the screen.
Options:
| Yes | Turns the scroll bar ON |
|---|---|
| No | Turns the scroll bar OFF |
This sets whether or not a Status bar is seen at the top of your player's display. The Status bar includes a Battery Status and Charging indicator, Volume indicator and Mode (STOP, PLAY, PAUSE) indicator.
Options:
| Yes | Turns the Status bar ON |
|---|---|
| No | Turns the Status bar OFF |
Many Custom WPS screens require this to be turned off to be viewed correctly.
With the Status Bar turned ON, this allows you to change how the Volume indicator is shown.
Options:
| Graphic | The Volume indicator is shown in a graphical form |
|---|---|
| Numeric | The Volume indicator is shown in numeric form (Range: 0 to 100, where 100 is full volume) |
With the Status Bar turned ON, this allows you to change how the Battery indicator is shown.
Options:
| Graphic | The Battery indicator is shown in a graphical form |
|---|---|
| Numeric | The Battery indicator is shown in numeric form (Range: 0 to 100, where 100 is full charged) |
The peak meter can be displayed on the While Playing Screen. The peak meter allows you to view the level of a song being played back using several indicators:
| The bar | This is the wide horizontal bar. It represents the current volume value. |
|---|---|
| The peak indicator | This is a little vertical line at the right end of the bar. It indicates the peak volume value that occurred recently. |
| The clip indicator | This is a little black block that is displayed at the very right of the scale when an overflow occurs. It usually doesn't show up during normal playback unless you play an audio file that is distorted heavily. If you encounter clipping while recording your recording will sound distorted. You should lower the gain. Note that the clip detection is not very precise. Clipping might occur without being indicated. |
| The scale | Between the indicators of the right and left channel there are little dots. These dots represent important volume values. In linear mode each dot is a 10% mark. In dbfs mode the dots represent the following values (from right to left): 0db, -3db, -6db, -9db, -12db, -18db, -24db, -30db, -40db, -50db, -60db. |
The peak meter has several configurable options.
This determines how fast the bar shrinks when the music becomes softer. Lower values make the peak meter look smoother. Value range is 1 to 126.
Specifies the time after which the peak indicator will reset. If you set this value to 5s, for example, then the peak indicator displays the loudest volume value that occurred within the last 5 seconds. Big values are good if you want to find the peak level of a song, which might be of interest when copying music from the jukebox via the analogue output to some other recording device.
This controls how long the clipping indicator will be visible after clipping is detected.
Determines whether the peak meter displays linear or logarithmic values. In 'dB' (decibel) scale the volume values are scaled logarithmically. This very similar to the perception of loudness. The volume meters of digital audio devices usually are scaled this way. If you are interested in the power level that is applied to your headphones you should choose 'linear' display. Unfortunately this value does not have real units like volts or watts since that depends on the phones. So they can only be displayed as percentage values.
Options:
| Linear(%) | Use a linear scale for displaying volume in the peak meter. |
|---|---|
| Logarithmic(dB) | Use a logarithmic scale, based on the track dB level for displaying volume in the peak meter. |
The Minimum of Range and Maximum of Range options define the full value range that the peak meter displays. Recommended values for dbFs are -40 for min. and 0 for maximum. For linear display, use 0 and 100%. Note that -40 dbFs is approximately 1% in linear value, but if you change the minimum setting in linear mode slightly and then change to dbFs there will be a large change. You can use these values for 'zooming' into the peak meter.
On iriver, this is currently fixed on 0% and cannot be changed.
Controls the maximum volume level to display on the Peak Meter. See Minimum of Range above.
Controls certain system setting for your player.
Options relating to the batteries in the jukebox unit.
Capacity can be used to tell the jukebox what capacity (in mAh) of battery is being used inside it. This value is used for calculating remaining battery life.
Default values are:
| Battery type | Default value | Applicable jukeboxes |
|---|---|---|
| NiMH | 1500mAh | Archos Studio, Archos Recorder v1 |
| Alkaline/NiMH | 500mAh | Archos Ondio |
| Li-Ion | 2300mAh | Archos FM Recorder, Archos Recorder v2 |
| Lithium Polymer | 1300mAh | iriver H1xx series |
These values correspond to the battery shipped with each unit.
For additional information, refer to the Battery FAQ for NiMH batteries or the Battery FAQ for Lithium Ion batteries. Battery University is a good resource for information about lithium batteries.
Deep discharge (all supported Archos jukeboxes except FM Recorder)
This option has been removed in Rockbox 2.5 because the charging algorithm now makes it unnecessary.
Set this to ON if you intend to keep your charger connected for a long period of time. It lets the batteries go down to 10% before starting to charge again. Setting this to OFF will cause the charging to restart on 95%.
Trickle Charge (all supported Archos jukeboxes except FM Recorder)
This option has been removed in Rockbox 2.5 because the charging algorithm now makes it unnecessary.
The jukebox cannot be turned off while the charger is connected. Therefore, trickle charge is needed to keep the batteries full after charging has completed. For more in depth information about charging see the Battery FAQ for NiMH batteries or the Battery FAQ for Lithium Ion batteries.
Options relating to the hard disk.
Rockbox has a timer that makes it spin down the hard disk after being idle for a certain time. You can modify this timeout here. This idle time is only affected by user activity, like navigating through file browser. When the hard disk spins up to fill mp3 buffer, it automatically spins down afterwards. This can be set to any value between 3s and 254s, in increments of 1s. The higher this Disk Spindown setting, the longer your disk will continue to spin when the drive is not being accessed. This enhances performance, as the disk does not need to start up again before allowing you to continue browsing. However, having a high setting does use more power. Use a lower setting for better battery life, especially if you don't mind waiting a second for the disk to spin up again before the player responds!
This setting controls whether the disk is powered OFF or only set to 'sleep' when spun down. Power off uses less power but takes longer to spin-up.
Currently this option is available for iriver players only. If enabled, player will build a cache from the complete file system structure (including directory and file names) to allow fast browsing inside the file browser without need to wait for the disk to spin up. Rebooting the player is required to turn this option on.
By default on every system boot (or immediately after USB connection) the cache is temporarily disabled and transparent background cache rebuilding is started. However, when this option is turned on no cache resyncing will be done on system boot but the cache is loaded directly from hard disk from the state where it was the player previously was shut off. This means that if user knows for sure he/she is not going to use bootloader USB mode to transfer new files to the hard disk, this option can be set on to skip the cache rebuilding and thus increasing the battery life. There should be no risk of losing data even if the cache is out-of-sync because only file tree browser uses the cache and low level file system functions never uses it directly. On possible error situations the cache is automatically disabled on the fly.
This setting controls time related menu options.
Options:
Set current time and date.
Choose 12 or 24 Hour clock.
Rockbox can be configured to turn off power after the unit has been idle for a defined number of minutes. The unit is idle when playback is stopped or paused. It is not idle while the USB or charger is connected, or while recording. Can be set anywhere between 1 and 10s or to 15s, 30s, 45s and 60s. Can also be set OFF.
This option lets you power off your jukebox after playing for a given time. This setting is reset on boot. Using this option disables the Wake up alarm (see below). Can be set between 15 minutes (Displayed as 00:15) up to 5 hours (Displayed as 05:00), in increments of 15 minutes. Can also be set OFF.
This option turns the jukebox off and then starts it up again at the specified time. This is most useful when combined with the Resume on Startup setting set to 'Yes,' so that the jukebox wakes up and immediately starts playing music.
Buttons:
| LEFT and RIGHT | Adjust the minutes setting. |
|---|---|
| UP and DOWN | Adjust the HOURS. |
| PLAY | Confirms the alarm and shuts your jukebox down. |
| STOP | Cancels setting an alarm. |
If the jukebox is turned on again before the alarm occurs, the alarm will be canceled.
Using this option disables the Sleep Timer.
This submenu relates to limits in the Rockbox operating system.
Configurable limit of files in the directory browser (file buffer size). You can configure the size to be between 50 and 10000 files in increments of 50 files. The default is 400. Higher values will shorten the music buffer.
Note: the device must be rebooted for settings to take effect!
Option to configure the maximum size of a playlist. The playlist size can be between 1000 and 20000 files in increments of 1000. By default it is 10000. Higher values will shorten the music buffer.
Note: the device must be rebooted for settings to take effect!
This option turns on and off the car ignition auto stop function.
When using the jukebox in a car, car adapter mode automatically stops playback on the jukebox when power (i.e., from cigarette lighter power adapter) to the external DC in jack is turned off. When the external power off condition is detected, the Car Adapter Mode function only pauses the playback. In order to shut down the jukebox completely the Idle Poweroff function must also be set. If power to the DC in jack is turned back on before the Idle Poweroff function has shut the jukebox off, playback will be resumed 5 seconds after the power is applied. This delay is to allow for the time while the car engine is being started. Once the jukebox is shut off either manually, or automatically with the Idle Poweroff function, it must be powered up manually to resume playback.
See here for further information.
Options:
| Yes | Turns ON Car adaptor mode |
|---|---|
| No | Turns OFF Car adaptor mode |
This option activates the line in port on Jukebox Player, which is off by default. This is useful for such applications as:
Bookmarks allow you to save your current position within a track so that you can return to it at a later time.
Bookmarks are saved on a per folder basis. In other words, all of the files in the same folder have their bookmarks stored together. You can store multiple bookmarks for the same track.
Write a bookmark to the disk whenever the stop key is pressed. If playback is stopped it can be resumed easily at a later time. The Resume function remembers your position in the most recently accessed track regardless of this setting.
Options:
| No | Turns OFF automatic bookmarking |
|---|---|
| Yes | Turns ON automatic bookmarking |
| Ask | Causes a prompt to be displayed whenever you press Stop, asking if you wish to 'Create a bookmark' |
When this is on, Rockbox automatically returns to the position of the last bookmark within a file when it is played. If set to Ask, Rockbox will ask the user whether they want to start from the beginning or the bookmark. When set to no, playback always starts from the beginning and the Bookmark file must be played or Load Bookmark selected from the Bookmarks submenu of the Main Menu while the file is playing
If this option is turned on, Rockbox will store a list of Bookmarks that have been accessed recently. This is then accessible from the Recent Bookmarks option of the Bookmarks submenu of the Main Menu.
This setting controls the language of the Rockbox user interface. Select this option to bring up a list of installed languages. Select a language to activate it. The language files must be in the /.rockbox/lang/ directory.
Controls the Voice User Interface, implemented predominantly for blind users, to help in navigating through menus and files. In simple terms, this makes RockBox speak your folder or filenames to you.
This option turns on the Voice User Interface, which will read out menu items and settings as they are selected by the cursor. In order for this to work, a voice file must be present in the /.rockbox/lang/ directory on the recorder. Voice files are large (1.5MB) and are not shipped with Rockbox by default. The voice file is the name of the language for which it is made, followed by the extension .voice. So for English, the file name would be english.voice. This option is ON by default. It will do nothing unless the appropriate .voice file is installed in the correct place on the jukebox.
Limitations
'How To' for using Voice Interface
Download Voice Files
This option turns on the speaking of directory names. The jukebox is not powerful enough to produce these voices in real time, so a number of options are available:
| .talk mp3 clip | Use special pre-recorded MP3 files (_dirname.talk) in each directory. These must be generated in advance, and are typically produced synthetically using a text to speech engine on a PC. If no such file exists, the output is as for the 'numbers' option below. |
|---|---|
| Spell | Speak the directory name by spelling it out letter by letter. Support is provided only for the most common letters and punctuation. |
| Numbers | Each directory is assigned a number based upon its position in the file list. They are then announced as 'Directory 1', 'Directory 2' etc. |
| Off | No attempt will be made to speak directory names. |
This option turns on the speaking of file names. The options are similar to Voice Directories:
| .talk mp3 clip | Use special pre-recorded MP3 files in each directory. These must be generated in advance, and are typically produced synthetically using a text to speech engine on a PC. The clip must have the same name as the music file with the .talk extension (e.g. Punkadiddle.mp3 would require a file called Punkadiddle.mp3.talk). If no such file exists, the output is as for the 'numbers' option below. |
|---|---|
| Spell | Speak the file name by spelling it out letter by letter. Support is provided only for the most common letters and punctuation. |
| Numbers | Each file is assigned a number based upon its position in the file list. They are then announced as 'File 1', 'File 2' etc. |
| Off | No attempt will be made to speak directory names. |
See http://www.rockbox.org/twiki/bin/view/Main/VoiceHowto for more details on configuring speech support in Rockbox.
Allows you to load or save system configuration files. On Archos jukeboxes, this menu also allows you to load or save different firmware versions.
Opens the file browser in the /.rockbox directory and displays all .cfg (configuration) files. Selecting one will activate it, stop will exit back to the menu. See the Write .cfg files option on the Manage Settings menu for details of how to save and edit a configuration file.
This displays a list of firmware files in the /.rockbox system directory. (.mod for Players, .ajz for Recorders, .iriver for Irivers.) Playing a firmware file loads it into memory. Thus it is possible to run the original firmware or a different version of Rockbox from here, assuming that you have the right files installed on your disk. There's no need of any other file or directory to be installed to use this option, The firmware is resident in that one file.
Resets all configuration settings back to their default values.
This option writes a Rockbox configuration file to your jukebox's hard disk. The configuration file has the ".cfg" extension and is used to store all of the user settings that are described throughout this manual.
A configuration file may reside anywhere on the hard disk. Multiple configuration files are permitted. So, for example, you could have a car.cfg file for the settings that you use while playing your jukebox in your car, and a headphones.cfg file to store the settings that you use while listening to your jukebox through headphones.
The Rockbox configuration file is a plain text file, so once you use the "Write .cfg file" option to create the file, you can edit the file on your computer using any text editor program. Configuration files use the following formatting rules:
Configuration files may be loaded using the Browse .cfg files option on the Manage Settings menu.
Configuration files do not need to contain all of the Rockbox options. You can create configuration files that change only certain settings. So, for example, you could create configuration files that control only the bass boost and treble boost functions. Create a few different files with different bass and treble settings, give each file a different name (such as EQ_Normal.cfg, EQ_Bassboost.cfg, etc.), and you can then use the Browse .cfg files option to select EQ presets!
This menu option switches to the radio screen.
| BUTTON | FUNCTION |
|---|---|
| LEFT, RIGHT | Change frequency in 0.1 MHz steps. For automatic station seek, hold LEFT/RIGHT for a little longer. |
| UP, DOWN | Change volume |
| PLAY (EXPERIMENTAL) | Freezes all screen updates, may enhance radio reception in some cases. |
| ON | Leave the radio screen with the radio playing |
| OFF | Back to main menu |
The FM radio has the ability to record and to remember station frequency settings (presets).
This menu option switches to the FM radio screen.
The keys are:
| BUTTON | SHORT PRESS FUNCTION | LONG PRESS FUNCTION |
|---|---|---|
| LEFT, RIGHT | Change frequency in 0.1 MHz steps. | Seeks to the next station or preset. |
| UP, DOWN | Change volume. | Change volume. |
| ON/PLAY | Mutes radio playback. | Switches between SCAN and PRESET mode. |
| Joystick press (H1xx series) or NAVI (H3xx series) | Opens a list of radio presets. You can view all the presets that you have, and switch to the station. | Displays the FM radio settings menu. Options include add preset, force mono, sound settings, and Auto Scan Presets |
| OFF/STOP | Stops radio and returns to the main menu. | Shuts down the jukebox. |
| A-B | Keeps radio playing and returns to the main menu. You can then press OFF/STOP to browse the file tree while listening to the radio | No effect. |
[This section still needs to be written.]
The Playlist Options menu allows you to work with playlists. Playlists can either be created automatically by playing a file in a directory directly, which will cause all of the files in that directory to be placed in the playlist, or they can be created by hand using the File Menu or using the Playlist Options menu. Both automatic and manually created playlists can be edited using this menu.
iriver users: See IriverPlaylistInstructions for detailed instructions on creating, editing and saving an on-the-fly playlist.
This option creates a playlist with all tracks in the current directory and all subdirectories. The playlist will be created one folder level "up" from where you currently are. If you are in the root directory when you select the 'create playlist' option, Rockbox will create a playlist of all tracks on the player, and that playlist will be place in the root directory.
Displays the contents of the playlist currently stored in memory.
Saves the current dynamic playlist, excluding queued tracks, to the specified file. If no path is provided then playlist is saved to current directory.
If set to ON then when you insert/queue a directory in Dynamic Playlist, all subdirectories will also be inserted. If set to ASK then you are prompted about recursive insertion when inserting a directory.
Rockbox features a plug-in concept. Only one plug-in may be running at a time. This menu item allows you to browse the various plug-ins that are available for Rockbox. For more information on which plug-ins are available on each supported platform, please see the Plug In page of the WikiManual.
This option shows MP3 ram buffer size, battery voltage level and estimated time remaining, disk total space and disk free space. On iriver, press UP and DOWN on the joystick to step through several pages of information. On Archos Players use the MINUS and PLUS keys to step through several pages of information.
This is an alternative way to access the ID3 viewer.
Displays some basic system information. This is, from top to bottom, the amount of memory Rockbox has available for storing music (the buffer), battery status, hard disk size and the amount of free space on the disk.
Software version and credits display.
This submenu is intended to be used only by Rockbox developers. It shows hardware, disk, battery status and a lot of other information. It is not recommended that users access this menu unless instructed to do so in the course of fixing a problem with Rockbox. In particular the 'Dump ROM Contents,' 'View/clear RTC RAM' and 'Screenshot' and 'Sound test' functions should be treated with care.
MichaelDiFebbo - 23 Aug 2005 (Loaded back into Wiki by EdSolman Sept 2005)