Freed At Last From Patents, Does Anyone Still Care About MP3?
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Godamn this made my job feel secure
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I just use ogg vorbis and vp9 in webm container, also webp for images. No proprietary nonsense in this house.
AV1 sucks on my hardware, but yes eventually. -
Except file size.
I convert everything from flac to mp3 before I put it on my phone. I'm lucky in that I can't tell the difference in quality at all.
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Current students generally have horrendous computer literacy. There was only about a 20ish year window where using a computer meant you were forced to become vaguely proficient in how it worked. Toward the end of the 90s into the 2000s plug and play began to work more reliably, then 10 years after that smartphone popularity took off and it's been apps ever since.
Students in high school this year were born from ~2007-2011. Most of them probably had a smartphone before a computer, if they even had the latter at all.
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Well, most of my music collection lies as mp3. I care about metadata and all of them have tags. I would love to convert my collection to opus but first I need FLACs and an easy way to move over metadata, since vorbis is different than ID3tag. Do you know a streamlined way for this?
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It's just one of those things where once you hear the difference you can't go back. It's sort of the difference between a 360p vs 1440p youtube video. The compression artifacts make the music sound so artifical to me. I don't really know how to describe it. But yes, there is a considerable increase in file size. For me it's a non issue because I have my music collection on an 8tb hdd. Though I wish phones still had micro sd slots so I could take them with me. My music collection is at 1.2 tb I think. I'm not trying to be an elitist asshole here. I'm just sharing my experience.
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I would say its more like 60hz refresh vs 90. The difference isn't super huge but when you notice it, you can't un-notice it, so it's almost better to stay ignorant to it.
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Having to rely on an internet connection for your main connection would be inconvenient as hell.
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I still prefer mp3 because it's small and doesn't sound any different to me than uncompressed formats, so why waste the disk space?
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Yep with the music compressed to hell, still sad about it after all this years
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Mp3's just don't sound good to me. It's a very old format that was pretty much the first of it's kind. Audio compression (while I don't like it) has improved greatly over the years. I saw another user bring up OGG OPUS and it's really impressive what it can do. I was able to compress a song to fit on a floppy disk while still being listenable. It kind of sucks that formats like mp3 and jpg are the standard when open formats that are major improvements over older formats fail to recieve significant adoption. AAC 320 is the 60/90 difference to me. I was shocked how close a 320 kbps m4a file is to CD quality flac.
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How? It's never failed me once. It's literally just like Spotify except my own collection.
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Even university students studying computer science don't have this basic knowledge anymore.
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If you are using the files played back at different tempos or keyshifted, the difference between lossy and lossless is a lot more apparent. For standard playback at normal pitch, mp3 is just fine.