Hmm. You don't just have a notch in your hearing, do you? Maybe one that just so happens to line up with the general frequencies of Patel's voice? I've heard that can happen. Maybe schedule an appointment with an ear doctor. Get a test. maybe a cleaning.
But why only in videos on Youtube and Rumble? And nowhere else? My hearing was tested a few months ago. My left ear is fine, right ear some hearing loss but it's not like I can hear some things and not others.
Speakers themselves can have 'notches' just like hearing loss. That's why large speakers often have woofers, midrange, and tweeters so when the sound goes out of the range of one then another will take it up. Laptop speakers have awful response.
Another example is my old Logitech computer 2.1 speakers. I always thought they sounded good. One day I found a frequency test and I couldn't hardly believe that between 200-400 hz and again at just over 1000 there is zero ability to play the sound. The things you don't know you're missing
Windows does have application-specific volume. When the browser video is playing, right click the volume button in the taskbar and click volume mixer. The application will only show in the mixer when it is making sound so the video has to be playing when it's adjusted.
What browser are you using? Have you tried an alternate one?
The same in Brave and Edge.
Browser doesn't seem to matter. I'll try it on this video.
Hmm. You don't just have a notch in your hearing, do you? Maybe one that just so happens to line up with the general frequencies of Patel's voice? I've heard that can happen. Maybe schedule an appointment with an ear doctor. Get a test. maybe a cleaning.
But why only in videos on Youtube and Rumble? And nowhere else? My hearing was tested a few months ago. My left ear is fine, right ear some hearing loss but it's not like I can hear some things and not others.
Speakers themselves can have 'notches' just like hearing loss. That's why large speakers often have woofers, midrange, and tweeters so when the sound goes out of the range of one then another will take it up. Laptop speakers have awful response.
Another example is my old Logitech computer 2.1 speakers. I always thought they sounded good. One day I found a frequency test and I couldn't hardly believe that between 200-400 hz and again at just over 1000 there is zero ability to play the sound. The things you don't know you're missing
Windows does have application-specific volume. When the browser video is playing, right click the volume button in the taskbar and click volume mixer. The application will only show in the mixer when it is making sound so the video has to be playing when it's adjusted.
I have that problem, hearing aide does not help.