VBR vs. CBR, hardware compatibility wise..... |
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VBR vs. CBR, hardware compatibility wise..... |
Mar 24 2003, 04:34
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#1
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 124 Joined: 19-March 03 From: Ol' Europe's Berlin / Potsdam Member No.: 5576 |
Hi there,
I've been reading my way for about 2 or 3 pages w/o finding the info I hoped to find in this section. I'm just getting started w. MP3 and stuff like that. From the info that I read in the last days, MPC seems to be really cool. But my concern is compatibility. I decided to stick w. MP3 but I'm still unsecure about using the superior VBR pre sets. I don't own a portable MP3 player, even don't have a MP3 compatible CD Player yet. I will certainly get me some stuff in the next future, so I really need to know about what's commonly awailable on the market. Do these days CD players cover various formats like VBR, MPC, OGG etc. etc.? I don't have the $$$ to spend on a player that calls for a prize that goes up like a lunar rocket. Wouldn't go for the cheapo stuff either. Is there a consensus about what CD player is a good one for playing the better formats, just like the Technics MK2 represents a good turn table? Sorry guys if this is a boring one, but I'm just getting started and I want to do it once.....the right way, rather than having to change things on hundreds of files once in a while. Sorry for the long post -------------------- [url="http://www.ford-mel-engine.com"]My Forum[/url]
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Mar 24 2003, 12:17
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#2
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Moderator Group: Super Moderator Posts: 3934 Joined: 29-September 01 Member No.: 73 |
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Mar 24 2003, 13:51
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#3
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 124 Joined: 19-March 03 From: Ol' Europe's Berlin / Potsdam Member No.: 5576 |
Thank you PIO I'll dig into that.
-------------------- [url="http://www.ford-mel-engine.com"]My Forum[/url]
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Mar 28 2003, 02:31
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#4
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Group: Members Posts: 573 Joined: 22-February 02 Member No.: 1375 |
If hardware compatibilty (portable/car/DVD player) is an issue, I personally would use "--alt-preset cbr <bitrate>" where bitrate might be 192, 224 or 256, depending on your kind of music and quality expectations.
Yes, you lose the efficiency of VBR and a bit of quality, but you can be sure that the files will play everywhere (and the quality is still much superior to the 128k stuff on Kazaa). And check out mp3gain (www.geocities.com/mp3gain), using that will make sure all tracks on your own sampler CD sound "equally loud" |
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Mar 28 2003, 03:06
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#5
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 124 Joined: 19-March 03 From: Ol' Europe's Berlin / Potsdam Member No.: 5576 |
Hey Sony,
Guess I'm gonna stick with the CBR insane pre set. You guys, please don't shoot me, but I made some comparisons and found out that I definately do hear a remarkable difference between a Wav and a compressed file @ 320 k/sec. I have to admit that I can't really hear a difference between the standard and the insane preset. Hell, I must be insane LOL. This post has been edited by CiTay: Mar 28 2003, 12:11 -------------------- [url="http://www.ford-mel-engine.com"]My Forum[/url]
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Mar 28 2003, 23:57
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#6
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Group: Members Posts: 573 Joined: 22-February 02 Member No.: 1375 |
Nobody will shoot you for using --alt-preset insane (=optimized CBR 320k) on this board
Although the differnece you hear might be due to the fact that the --alt-presets make the tracks a little more quiet (scalefac 0.93 I think...) I wouldnt go that high in bitrate, but please there you go |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 19th May 2013 - 09:29 |