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2009-11-27
, 13:02
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Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Switzerland
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#2
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2009-11-27
, 13:56
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Posts: 21 |
Thanked: 56 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Finland
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#3
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2009-11-27
, 14:09
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Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Switzerland
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#4
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2009-11-27
, 14:11
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Posts: 909 |
Thanked: 216 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Bremen, Germany
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#5
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2009-11-27
, 14:11
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Posts: 284 |
Thanked: 498 times |
Joined on Jun 2009
@ Poland
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#6
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2009-11-27
, 14:16
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Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Switzerland
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#7
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wait, does that mean the n900 does not have a fm receiver? but i like to listen to radio
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2009-11-27
, 14:22
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Posts: 1,034 |
Thanked: 784 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Annapolis, MD
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#8
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2009-11-27
, 14:28
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Posts: 284 |
Thanked: 498 times |
Joined on Jun 2009
@ Poland
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#9
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2009-11-27
, 14:30
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Posts: 183 |
Thanked: 40 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Germany
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#10
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The imagination consoles people about what they cannot be
and the humor about what they actually are.
-Albert Camus
Tags |
n900 fm transmitter week |
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I've got both the media player's and the main system's volume at maximum and I'm using a channel that is dead static (hard to do in my area since even "empty" frequencies often can be picking up content from adjacent stations).
While this has helped a bit, I still have to hold my N900 right up to the radio (which somehow works better then holding it close to the car's antenna) to hear anything at all.
Any way to boost the output of this? I forgot my head phones today, but would plugging them in act as a transmitting antenna the same way they act as a receiving antenna for the FM radio app?