Also, the air is so thin at 65,000ft that when wind moves at 100mph it only gives a force of a wind at a few mph down here on the surface, so the fans don't actually have to expend that much energy to keep it stationary. At 65k ft there are hardly ever any winds anyways, and if there are, they are usually small.
The X-Fi3 keeps with the company's commitment to audio fidelity, thanks to the apt-X codec, which supposedly offers audio quality similar to a wired connection when streaming. On that front, the device also handles FLAC files.
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Also, the air is so thin at 65,000ft that when wind moves at 100mph it only gives a force of a wind at a few mph down here on the surface, so the fans don't actually have to expend that much energy to keep it stationary. At 65k ft there are hardly ever any winds anyways, and if there are, they are usually small.
thanks for clearing everything else up TAZ.