AAC at 128kbps listening test, final preparations |
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AAC at 128kbps listening test, final preparations |
May 30 2003, 05:33
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#1
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![]() Rarewares admin Group: Members Posts: 7515 Joined: 30-September 01 From: Brazil Member No.: 81 |
I'm finishing the plans of a 128kbps listening test.
Here are the ideas I have: - I'll first conduct a listening test of AAC only at 128kbps. After this test is finished, I would take the winner and conduct a general 128kbps listening test, comparing AAC, MPC, MP3, Vorbis, and maybe Atrac3 and/or WMA. -These are the samples I'm thinking of using: Samples from ff123's 64kbps listening test: ATrain.wav BeautySlept.wav Blackwater.wav FloorEssence.wav Layla.wav LifeShatters.wav LisztBMinor.wav MidnightVoyage.wav thear1.wav TheSource.wav Waiting.wav BachS1007.wav would be replaced by BWW1011.wav, suggested by GuruBoolez the following problem cases would be added: 41_30sec.wav death2.wav IMO, there are too many samples. I would like to stay at 10 max. So, I'd like to receive suggestions about dropping and/or replacing some of them. If you want to check them for yourself, they are available at ff123's samples page. - The encoders and settings tested would be Psytel AACenc 2.15 -streaming latest FAAC -a 64 latest Nero - streaming Sorenson Squeeze 3.5 (FhG Pro) 128kbps QuickTime 6.2 (Dolby) 128kbps - Testing setup would be standard ABC/HR, double blind, just like the 64kbps test. Please, comment/criticize/suggest now or shut up forever. Thank-you very much. Regards; Roberto. -------------------- Get up-to-date binaries of Lame, AAC, Vorbis and much more at RareWares:
http://www.rarewares.org |
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May 30 2003, 06:12
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#2
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Group: Members Posts: 256 Joined: 29-July 02 From: Vancouver, Canada Member No.: 2854 |
I think this question may be off topic but are you also planning a higher bitrate test as well?
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May 30 2003, 06:25
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#3
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Group: Members Posts: 7 Joined: 18-May 03 Member No.: 6691 |
rjamorim,
As you are no doubt aware, Quicktime Pro 6.2 has three quality levels at any given bitrate, "good", "better", and "best". iTunes uses "good", and there is a significant difference betwen "good" and "best" at 128. Other reviews/tests I've seen have been comparing both. I would suggest testing both since iTunes has a high profile and QT Pro "best" has its evangelists. Thanks for taking the time to create and manage the test. |
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May 30 2003, 06:29
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#4
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![]() Rarewares admin Group: Members Posts: 7515 Joined: 30-September 01 From: Brazil Member No.: 81 |
QUOTE (Sgt_Strider @ May 30 2003 - 02:12 AM) I think this question may be off topic but are you also planning a higher bitrate test as well? Maybe, but I'm still wondering if there's any point. Most samples get transparent on 160kbps+, except for golden eared people. And if I limit the test to killer samples, then the results will be useless, since a small amount of people listem to these. -------------------- Get up-to-date binaries of Lame, AAC, Vorbis and much more at RareWares:
http://www.rarewares.org |
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May 30 2003, 06:39
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#5
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![]() Rarewares admin Group: Members Posts: 7515 Joined: 30-September 01 From: Brazil Member No.: 81 |
QUOTE (6545608403 @ May 30 2003 - 02:25 AM) As you are no doubt aware, Quicktime Pro 6.2 has three quality levels at any given bitrate, "good", "better", and "best". It's the same in QuickTime 6.1, actually. But they are called "low", "medium" and "high" I plan to use "high"/"best", of course. QUOTE iTunes uses "good", and there is a significant difference betwen "good" and "best" at 128. Other reviews/tests I've seen have been comparing both. I would suggest testing both since iTunes has a high profile and QT Pro "best" has its evangelists. Hrm. I don't know. I know iTunes is the way to go if you plan to perform batch encodings, but people really concerned about quality should go with QuickTime (even if using a tool like AACelerator). Biggest problem is that another encode for each sample would make a test that's already big enough even bigger, not to mention it would kill more bandwidth. :-/ -------------------- Get up-to-date binaries of Lame, AAC, Vorbis and much more at RareWares:
http://www.rarewares.org |
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May 30 2003, 09:00
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#6
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 304 Joined: 9-August 02 From: SoFo Member No.: 3002 |
I just want to say that listening tests on AAC encoded files are much anticipated (and appreciated!). Zillions of tests have been carried out on mp3s so it's about time..
By the way, I'm cheering for the underdog FAAC! (at least the test might give the developer some hints where to go). I happen to favor small free encoders:) |
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May 30 2003, 09:12
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#7
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 315 Joined: 18-February 03 From: Perth, Western Australia Member No.: 5050 |
I think your general concept looks pretty good Roberto, with a mix of problem and real life music samples. I'm not familiar with all the samples listed, but I think you should bias the selection towards real music rather than problem samples.
I question the need for higher bit rates too, as +160 kbits, there are many codecs that approach transparency. 128 kbits is a reasonable area for those with storage limitations, and gives you more room to be able hear differences in how each of the encoders behaves with certain situations. Bring it on. Den. This post has been edited by den: May 30 2003, 09:12 -------------------- Den
My blog - http://www.iinet.net.au/~den |
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Jun 2 2003, 13:40
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#8
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![]() Group: Members Posts: 103 Joined: 1-January 03 From: Athens, Greece Member No.: 4350 |
As a MacOS X user, I have to note that there is a big quality difference between the iTunes 4.01 AAC encoding which uses the lowest quality setting of QuickTime Pro 6.2 and the encoding using directly QuickTime Pro 6.2 at the highest quality setting.
Personally, I encode my iPod music using the excellent Ovolab AAChoo front-end for the QuickTime Pro AAC codec that allows the use of the highest quality setting of QuickTime Pro http://www.ovolab.com/ and also automatically updates the iTunes music library after an encoding session. This utility can be very helpful for the AAC tests and I think it is essential for MacOS X + iPod users who want the best available quality for their encodings. This post has been edited by Paspro: Jun 2 2003, 13:42 |
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