Freed At Last From Patents, Does Anyone Still Care About MP3?
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Ubiquitousness is not an aspect of the codec, let alone a technical one. It's yet another failure of capitalism.
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Check out the many OTR Gold podcasts that have the serialized shows as episodes.
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… I’m out of the loop. Why don’t people care about mp3s?
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Find somewhere that accepts/generates ewaste and you might be able to score an internal CD/DVD drives. We were doing some reorganizing at work and I saw a literal box full of 5.25" drives
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The concept of file extensions really break down when it comes to audio and video files
Honestly anywhere other than windows they start getting a bit funky since most ecosystems don't actually rely on the filename to determine the file type
It also doesn't help that so many file types are just a bunch of text files shoved into a zip file wearing a mask. It's all abstractions all the way down baby!
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Mhmm I haven’t heard of the first two. I still listen to mp3s that I got from the 90s.
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@dustyData Oh my gosh. I see this every single day at work. So many people have no idea where any of their documents are saved, until they can’t find them. I’ll be honest, I use a lot of streaming services for music as well, but I think I might actually go back to simply buying music. Who knows. Call me old-fashioned and only 35 years old, but I still see a point in local storage in traditional desktop type software. There’s not enough of it around here.
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@daggermoon Ogg is actually my preference, but so much stuff still doesn’t support it these days.
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Most music files may be MP3s, but music files are rare these days. I wouldn't be surprised if most people under 30 have never interacted with a music file at all, they just use streaming services.
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Still care about MP3- it's the bog standard, the thing EVERYthing supports. Like the shitty SBC codec on Bluetooth. I've still got tons of MP3s and they aren't going away anytime soon.
Everything I get new though is high-res FLAC.
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Ogg at lower bitrates sounded better than mp3 at the same rate. Consumers dont care, but for a lot of game developers the zero patent risk and higher quality shipping with smaller files made Ogg a great choice at the time.
For me? FLACs are the only way.... which reminds me, I wonder I can still convert all the SHN (shorten) lossless files I still have. I should get on that before a converter doesn't exist.
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The Nyquist limit?
You need sampling at twice the frequency as a minimum to extract a time domain signal into the frequency domain. It says nothing about "perfect" especially when you're listening in the time domain.
There is a lot of data in the time domain that impacts sound/signal quality. As others have said though, it probably doesn't matter without high quality equipment and a good ear.
It's also good to note that you can train your hearing. A musician or producer or audiophile are going to hear things and qualities you don't. It's edge cases though, and generally irrelevant to regular listening.
You definitely can hear the difference between MP3 320 and lower mp3 bitrates though.
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m4a
That's mp4, which is 33% better than mp3 /j
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the concept of file folders and directories, essential to previous generations’ understanding of computers, is gibberish to many modern students.
This is so weird to me. Aren't people at all curious? Like, I would never try to fix a car's engine, but I have a basic understanding of how one works. I wouldn't install a toilet, but I know about J-traps. I wouldn't write my own 3D engine, but I know the basics of how they work.
Files and folder is such a fundamental and basic thing. Where's the basic curiosity?