Copia de IMG_3097
“Lema del año”
"Unos a Otros"
Copia de IMG_3180
Primero Dios en la familia
Iglesia Bíblica Cristiana “Torre Fuerte”
“Edificando familias sólidas”
IMG_0071
Primero Dios en la familia
Iglesia Bíblica Cristiana “Torre Fuerte”
“Edificando familias sólidas”
IMG_6955 (1)
Buscanos en nuestras Redes Sociales
IMG_0132
Versículo del mes
“La muerte y la vida están en poder de la LENGUA, y el que la ama comerá de sus frutos”.
Proverbios 18:21

Ghosts S01 Dts (TESTED)

When Sam is talking to a ghost while Jay is on the phone, the DTS track creates a "phantom center" for the ghosts. Their voices are slightly diffused, sent to the front left and right with a tiny reverb tail (simulating the mansion’s acoustics), while Jay’s voice remains dry and centered. This subtle separation allows your brain to automatically distinguish who is real and who is spectral without any visual cue.

In Episode 3, "Viking Funeral," when Thorfinn (the Viking ghost) stomps across the second-floor balcony, the DTS mix directs the low-frequency thuds specifically to the (subwoofer) while the creaking floorboards pan seamlessly from the rear left to rear right surround channels. This creates a physical sense of verticality—you feel the weight of a 1,000-year-old ghost moving above you, even though he is invisible to Jay standing in the kitchen. Spectral Dynamics: The LFE Channel’s Secret Role One of the most underrated aspects of Ghosts Season 1 is its use of sub-bass to denote ghostly presence. In a standard stereo or compressed audio track, the "whoosh" of a ghost walking through a wall sounds thin and tinny. In DTS, it is an event. ghosts s01 dts

(typically presented in 5.1 or 7.1 channels on Season 1 releases) excels at what audio engineers call discreet channel imaging . Unlike compressed formats that blur sound into a generalized "atmos," DTS provides a higher bitrate, allowing individual channels to remain pristine and distinct. When Sam is talking to a ghost while

When CBS’s Ghosts premiered in the fall of 2021, it was immediately hailed as a refreshing, cozy sitcom—a cross between The Office ’s deadpan humor and Beetlejuice ’s supernatural whimsy. But beneath the surface of its quick-witted jokes and charming ensemble cast lies a surprisingly sophisticated soundscape. For the discerning home theater enthusiast, watching Ghosts Season 1 with a DTS (Digital Theater Systems) audio track transforms a lighthearted comedy into an immersive, three-dimensional sonic experience. In Episode 3, "Viking Funeral," when Thorfinn (the

You will laugh at the jokes. But with DTS, you will also jump at the creaks, feel the rumbles, and truly understand what it means to live in a house where the unseen is always listening. For the audiophile who loves sitcoms, this is the secret gem of 2021’s television audio landscape.