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I suppose they might have regarded it as being small compared to the compliance offered by the box.

I also notice that the parameters for calculation also excludes radiator compliance (cms). Would this be true for passive radiators as well, where a bigger box and a lighter PR will have a higher bass boost for the same fs? It is well known that Mms also affects the efficiency of speaker drivers, the lower the Mms the higher the higher the efficiency. Of course I think there must be a trade off in this. The bigger the box volume the smaller the Mms required. I realized that the resonant frequency depends on box volume and radiator Mms. Looking at some calculators such as this one. Seems to have quite a lot of advantages, as well as disadvantages.ĭayton Audio SD215-PR 8" Passive Radiator I soon learn the challenges of getting low bass from an 8" driver, big box needed. Overall, the idea has significant upside, but the execution isn't 100% there yet.I am building a speaker based on a Eminnence Beta8cx. I also found I have to right click each time I want to delete a message (pressing the Delete key won't do it.) And if it's one thing busy office workers hate, it's extra clicks. After using the program this morning, I didn't see an obvious way to do that. Like if something is a receipt, it needs to go under purchasing, regardless of the sender. It's a lot easier than trying to read back over endless threads of text.īut I also need to file emails accordingly, beyond just the sender.

So I enjoy knowing right off the bat that I've received 5 emails from my boss and 3 emails from the Assistant Director. When I'm working on a project, I find I'm paying closest attention to the people directly involved, while others remain in the periphery.

But for those who work on small teams, I can definitely see the upside. I suppose if you receive 500 emails from 200 different people each day, then this isn't the organizational system for you. So you'll see all the emails that you received from John The Boss today, then the ones you received from him yesterday, etc. It groups things by day first, then by contact. Looks great for those with at most ~10-20 contacts. The full Mac app is expected to be released at the end of September, and ahead of release, users can sign up for the beta on the company's website. Unibox supports all IMAP accounts and works with both Mountain Lion and Mavericks. All attachments sent to and received from contacts are readily available, and attached media is presented in a grid view. Unibox's interface is divided into two main panes, with the left side displaying contacts and the right side displaying all messages that have been received/exchanged with a particular person or website.Īccording to Unibox, this chat-like design significantly reduces email clutter by grouping incoming messages from contacts into a single list.Ĭomposing emails with the app is done in a single window, which eliminates separate compose windows utilized by existing apps like Mail. The app is designed to make email more "personal" by organizing emails into a contact-centric view. Unibox, a new Messages-style email client that was first announced in August of 2012, is now available for download as part of a public beta test.
