QUOTE(CiTay @ Jun 28 2006, 01:05)

...
I don't really see a problem with the seeking. The seek times for single tracks are ok.
Plus i don't really seek that much, mostly i either skip to another track or i listen to the current track.
... but the
last versions were like the final touches to an almost finished painting (SV7).
Some people think this is like AAC, needing new versions constantly or it's "dead",
no it's not. It can't be perfected much more at this state. ...
Knowing that it
reached such a high level of "quality maturity" is why i have an extensive MPC collection and don't care much who proclaims MPC dead or not. Sure, it's nice to see the fast development of AAC and MP3, but some people get this feeling that they need to re-encode their entire collection when improved versions of those come out.
With MPC, you had stable quality since many versions and it's still the benchmark for other codecs in the transparency range.P.S. rjamorim i knew i could count on you 
I subscribe fully to Citay (and seanyseansean's opinions),
and emphasize a little bit above^^
Moreover:
+ MPC:+ portable hardware support:
+ Rockbox
+ mobile Phones
+ Ipod
+ laptop, Linux, *NIX etc.
+ no seek problems
+ no problems with transcoding to mp3
++ the stable quality, which makes MPC to an archive quality format behind Lossless, to save space, eg. as backup for Lossless collection on different media.
transcoding from high bitrate lossy-wavpack instead from MPC, might be theoretically with less artefacts, though practically, the lossy-wavpack would not serve a good purpose (for me).
I have my collection as Lossless Flac or wavpack, the backup is MPC at quality 7 - 8 (--ms 15 --xlevel) + some MPC encodings I did in the pre-Loslsess era.
I achieve transparency with lower bitrate MPC than with higher bitrate wavpack-lossy.
The transcoding to MP3is as good as transcoding from Loslsess to mp3 in this respect, which i do only for portable usage, ie. 1 GB USB stick for running outdoors, or car radio.
So yes, I encode each month several (new) albums to MPC !
It rocks.
As the Ogg,mp3/lame,aac lovers give their opinions about MPC, I tell now mine about ogg,aac,lame-mp3:
The big disadvantage of aac, ogg, mp3, even mp3-Lame:
There are no secure stable encoder versions, especially in the high bitrate range, sorry, but a lot of other encoder versions.
Obviously, the target of developers is now in the low-mid bitrates for phones eg., 32k, 48k, 64k, already 128k seems to be out of the focus, as 128k is already at a higher level than in some years before, see Lame !
(But you see also with lame, that it's still not perfect at high bitrates, see the findings of halb27 eg. with 320k und unused bits)
There are no public high bitrate tests, besides 1 ! single test at 180k by Guruboolez with classical, 1 genre.
The latest 128k test was done without testing latest MPC. (Though the result of that 128k test is quite unspecific, all encoders were rated nearly same, close to transparency, so including mpc, or not, would not have changed anything). This is coherent with often uttered personal opinions at HA, that people cannot ABX or listen the difference between 128k vbr modern format and the original.
Well, I don't need to write more, everybody should get what he likes & prefers

And everybody who is curious, should take the MPC challenge, not only on headphone, but also with speakers...
There are other aspects regarding the quantity of the formats:
here on HA you have most people in high quality formats, Lossless, mpc, ogg, aac, mp3 only as Lame.
But in real life ?
MP3 dominates, see the portable players, which are cheapo.
Though, the cheapo players offer also WMA...
As long ogg/aac aren't implemented on every cheapo Joe Doe player, they will not replace mp3 !
And considering the decreasing prices for memory, and increasing support for portable Loslsess players, even in cars, probably Loslsess, Flac, might win the race!
So, a discussion about aac/ogg vs. MPC is moot, a dead discussion before starting here.