

If the point stands at 0, it means gapless playback. If the point is to the left of 0, the next track will start before the previous one finishes, with the previous track smoothly fading out. If the point is to the left of 0, the tracks will have 1-2 second gap. When the slider is enabled, it controls the gap between tracks, or how much they are mixed one over another, or overlapped, when track change takes place in a playback queue. Specific Audio Formats: IT, MO3, MOD, MTM, S3M, UMX, XM, AY, GBS, GYM, HES, KSS, NSF, NSFE, SAP, SPC, VGMĪdvanced Audio Settings Gap/Overlap.Playlist formats: CUE, M3U, M3U8, PLS, XSPF.Lossless: ALAC, APE, DFF, DSF, FLAC, TTA, WMA Lossless, WV.

The lossy formats are: AAC, M4A, M4B, MP1, MP2, MP3, MP+, MPC, MPP, OGA, OGG, OPUS, RA, RM, WMA.Uncompressed formats: AIF, AIFF, ASF, DSD, PCM, WAV.They include uncompressed, lossy and lossless. VOX Music Player supports most of the popular audio files. Radio is available only for Premium subscription holders. The list of users’ Favorite radio stations sync across all users’ devices. Any station can be added to the Favorites tab. Users are also offered to see World’s Trending stations and Recently Played ones.

Users can browse stations or view all available stations which are sorted by genre or country. Radio includes over 30,000 radio stations. To add music to the library, users can use VOX Music Cloud website (requires creating an account), or drop files of VOX Music Player on macOS. Users access VOX Music Cloud in VOX Music Player (Library tab for iOS). VOX Music Cloud serves as a media library which is used to stream music from. Uploaded audio files aren’t compressed or converted, and remain their original format, size etc. VOX Music Cloud supports most audio formats, including uncompressed, lossy and lossless. To store music, users can upload it to VOX Music Cloud – an online music storage with unlimited storage space. Vox 2.0 introduces a minimal interface, reminiscent of the Winamp audio player, and a number of features considered unique in comparison to macOS's built-in iTunes. The new 1.0 version of Vox was released on August 6, 2013, and in less than 6 months, Coppertino released the new 2.0 version of the music player. In 2011, Nonni sold Vox to Coppertino, a Ukrainian Mac developer company headquartered in Los Angeles, CA, in exchange for minority stock. Released in 2007 by a student, Alessio Nonni, Vox was designed to be a lightweight media player that supports playing various file types including lossless formats.
