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Windows · Free
jetAudio 8.1.12
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How to Use Jett - jetAudio

Start jetAudio and drag audio files into the window, or use File > Open to browse your music library — that's the basic approach to how to use jett as your go-to audio player on Windows. The COWON jetAudio Windows version handles everything from MP3s to lossless formats, and the interface gets out of your way once you understand where things live.

Getting Started with jetAudio

Download and Installation

Grab the installer from the official site and run the setup wizard. It'll take about a minute on Windows 10 or Windows 11. The program defaults to a sleek dark interface that doesn't hog resources. Unlike some competitors (MediaMonkey's heavier approach to library management, jetAudio audio player keeps things lightweight while still packing serious features underneath.

Once installed, point the software at your music folders through Tools > Folder Scanning. It'll index everything automatically. No need to manually add tracks one by one.

Basic Playback

Hit play, adjust volume with the slider, and use the seekbar to jump to any point in a track. Keyboard shortcuts work here: spacebar pauses, arrow keys skip tracks. The playlist panel on the right shows what's queued up. Create a custom playlist by right-clicking tracks and selecting Add to Playlist, then name it something useful.

How to Use JetAudio's Key Features

The Equalizer and Audio Tweaking

This is where COWON jetAudio stands out. Open the Equalizer from the Tools menu — you get preset curves for different genres (Rock, Jazz, Classical) or build your own. The parametric EQ lets you target specific frequencies with surgical precision. Most free players just give you basic bass/treble sliders, so this is legitimately better.

The crossfade feature smooths transitions between tracks. Set it in Preferences > Playback > Crossfade Duration (measured in milliseconds). Works great for DJ-style mixing or just making albums flow without awkward gaps.

Audio Conversion and Format Support

jetAudio media player handles MP3, FLAC, OGG, WAV, and AAC natively. Need to convert between formats? Go to Tools > Audio Converter. Drop in a batch of files, pick your output format and bitrate, and let it run. Quality stays solid at 320kbps MP3 or lossless FLAC export.

CD Ripping

Insert a disc and use Tools > CD Ripper. The software automatically queries online databases for track metadata, so you don't manually type album names. Choose your audio format (MP3, FLAC, WAV) and bitrate. Ripping a full album takes maybe 5–10 minutes depending on your drive speed.

Pro Tip: Most people miss the visualizer. Right-click the main waveform display and toggle Visualization to see real-time audio patterns synced to playback. It's not essential, but it's a nice touch when you're focusing on sound quality — drag the visualizer window to a second monitor if you've got one.

Customizing the Interface

How to use jett efficiently means adapting the layout to your workflow. The skin system lets you change colors and button layouts from View > Skins. Dock panels to the sides or float them as separate windows. Some prefer the compact player-only view; others want the full library manager visible at all times. There's no wrong setup.

How to Use JetAudio vs. Alternatives

Unlike MusicBee's extensive tagging tools, jetAudio focuses on audio fidelity and playback control. If you need serious library management, MusicBee wins. But for pure listening and format flexibility, this player delivers without bloat.

The jetAudio portable version runs from a USB stick with zero installation, perfect for shared computers or testing before committing disk space.

Start with downloading the latest stable release to experience the difference COWON's decades of audio engineering brings to Windows playback.