Neither the Developer Options nor the 3rd party Bluetooth Codec Changer app lets me select 16-bit. This makes me concerned that ASUS has hardcoded it to 24-bit in the AOSP build and that this action might prevent the phone from ever going into aptX A...
It seems the engineers who work on the AOSP build for the ROG Phone 8 have not configured the LE Audio (LEA) configuration file to enable aptX Adaptive over LEA.The Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 should support this. It was introduced with the previous generatio...
Despite specifying 6Ghz is supported in the product marketing, both the Zenfone 9 and ROG Phone 6 appear to be unable to see 6GHz band access points. It seems as though the engineers forgot to implement support for this.
Please can you add LC3 and LC3plus codecs?I think LC3 has no cost. LC3plus costs €0.07 per unit of product, i.e. per phone or per earbud set.www.iis.fraunhofer.de/en/ff/amm/communication/lc3.html
Having further studied Qualcomm's developer documentation, I can't seem to come to a better conclusion at the moment, other than to assume that this 24-bit-only configuration is normal for aptX Lossless. The documentation on lossless is very thin on...
I captured the system logs whilst connecting my QCC3081 ear hooks. The system recognises they are capable of aptX Adaptive v2.2 (aptX Lossless capable). I then played a 16-bit 44.1kHz lossless track from Apple Music.You can see that the system recogn...
I really hope they enable LE Audio for this model. I have some LE Audio capable earbuds I've never been able to use with anything yet.LHDC isn't part of Android 14, but it would be nice to see it slipped in as well.
Dolby Atmos requires license fees to be paid. LE Audio and LC3 are already in Android 13 and are standards that are yet to take off in the consumer space. Unless there’s a fundamental flaw in the SoC, it’s unlikely it will be withheld. I was just hop...