vanguard
Registered
I have a 2 year old with special needs. One of the things that he does is listening therapy. Basically, he listens to special music through special headphones a few times a day.
The music is your normal kids stuff (wheels on the bus go round and round, abc song, bingo, etc.) but the tone is modulated so that it varies up and done. One second it's high pitched, a few seconds later it's low pitched. These changes are critical to giving him an "auditory workout" and the loss associated with converting to MP3 would not be acceptable.
My problem is that the CD player we use now doesn't do well keeping up with a 2 year old. It skips, it stops playing, it's large, etc.
Questions:
1) Can the iPod shuffle play a format that has no loss at all? Is it hard to do?
2) Does the iPod shuffle use a normal headphone jack? Our therapy headphones are standard but I want to make sure the iPod is too.
The music is your normal kids stuff (wheels on the bus go round and round, abc song, bingo, etc.) but the tone is modulated so that it varies up and done. One second it's high pitched, a few seconds later it's low pitched. These changes are critical to giving him an "auditory workout" and the loss associated with converting to MP3 would not be acceptable.
My problem is that the CD player we use now doesn't do well keeping up with a 2 year old. It skips, it stops playing, it's large, etc.
Questions:
1) Can the iPod shuffle play a format that has no loss at all? Is it hard to do?
2) Does the iPod shuffle use a normal headphone jack? Our therapy headphones are standard but I want to make sure the iPod is too.