Freed At Last From Patents, Does Anyone Still Care About MP3?
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I used to think this but the convenience won out. Now over holiday break, my teen discovered my crate of CDs that he doesn’t remember seeing in his lifetime!
And now I need to decide whether to buy a CD or DVD player to transfer to a more usable format - the last one I had was an old Xbox that is no longer with us
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Could it be the sound system? Most people seem to prefer the convenience of Bluetooth, ubiquitous small speakers, and maybe that’s usually the limiting factor
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No, I don't think you're as asshole at all, and don't doubt you can hear the difference. I just can't, myself. Or at least I've never been able to.
But I also watch DVDs and didn't really notice the resolution, either. (Old TV shows, that I can notice.
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I'd argue you've got that backwards; CD is to vinyl what lossless is to .mp3. That said, I know what you mean.
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I should add that I have a hackish python script for that conversion. It basically mirrors the tree of MP3s and FLAC files, converting the FLACs and hard linking everything else. So it doesn't use too much more disk. Then I copy that to my phone. I could put it up somewhere if it would be useful.
But I don't have as much music as you, either.
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IIRC that era of iPods had issues with their preamps. I remember when I switched from a Nano to a classic that there was noticeable clipping and other distortion where there wasn't before. I would have returned it but I had already sold my Nano...
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I thought so too, but once I got IEMs. The drums felt more organic and I heard parts of guitars that I didn't on mp3.
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Ye, when outdoors in my wireless headphones, I won't even hear the difference.
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I would guess that at least part of the issue there is also that the data isn't all that useful unless it's also exported to some format that other software can read. That format may not capture everything that the native format stores.
In another comment in this thread, I was reading the article on Adobe Creative Cloud, which commented on the fact that the format is proprietary. I can set up some "data storage service", and maybe Adobe lets users export their Creative Cloud data there. Maybe users even have local storage.
But...then, what do you do with the data? Suppose I just get a copy of the native format. If nothing other than the software on Adobe's servers can use it, that doesn't help me at all. Maybe you can export the data, export to an open format like a PNG or something, but you probably don't retain everything. Like, I can maybe get my final image out, but I don't get all the project workflow stuff associated with the work I've done. Macros, brushes, stuff broken up into layers, undo history...
I mean, you have to have the ability to use the software to maintain full use of the data, and Adobe's not going to give you that.
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I don't use any one format. No idea what audio formats I have but probably a lot. Never cared, VLC takes them all.
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Oh, yeah, not saying that they were the first filesystems, just that I can remember that transition on the personal computer.
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Vinyl is lossy in that any dust or scratches on the record can be heard in the output, so this is only true if you've got an absolutely pristine vinyl.