Freed At Last From Patents, Does Anyone Still Care About MP3?
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The abstraction away of the idea of files and folders is a deliberate user disempowerment strategy by app and mobile OS creators. The underlying concept is that the app owns the data, you don't. It also conceals the fact that use of standard file formats and directory structure conventions were developed to facilitate interoperability: apps come and go, but the data was meant to live on regardless. Of course, vendors want to break interoperability since doing so enables lock-in. Even when the format of the underlying content is standarized, they'll still try to fuck you over by imposing a proprietary metadata standard.
Just another example of enshittification at work.
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There's a reason I don't use Spotify. Well, there are multiple reasons I don't use Spotify, but one of them is because I live in an area where stable cell tower connections aren't a given.
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I use it to (re)compress audiobooks, podcasts and such, they still sound very good at 32 kbps.
Fun fact, Opus has been supported by a hobby OS like MorphOS for years, on ancient hardware. -
Have you ever used Bandcamp before?
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I use a combination of mp3s and opus primarily but I can't remember if opus is the open format ogg or not.
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It's a sample of 1, but we hired a young guy with a CS Master's degree. I told him in polite ways that he should not use ChatGPT and his code sucked. When he was told to fix something, he rewrote it completely with a new prompt instead of understanding bugs. He didn't last more than 2 months.
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Doesn't the iPod use AAC?
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At least the shuffle is partly coherent.
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Are you a baddie?
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And what's the extension of opus? .opus?
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Are you sure? From everything I've heard MP3 bitrates at 192 or above are generally considered to be transparent.
In case you want to do it more scientifically, try ABX testing. It's a bit time consuming but it should provide clearer results.
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Thanks, it certainly looks useful.
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I read the manual for my cars radio. It has a max file size limit of like 256 songs or so per folder. But it can also accept 256 folders.
So if your cars is anything like mine you can probably play your songs just by splitting them up into more folders.
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I actually used discogs a lot in the past. They can be quite expensive at times. Though this will be a mix of everything since not everything can be obtainable legally, at least for my archive.
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Apart from my home hifi (which is built around flac) everything i liaten to ia mp3. Podcasts - mp3. Car audio system? Max 192kbps mp3. My phone? Full of mp3.
And I'm sure I'm not alone.
To say mp3 is not relevant anymore is just misguided. -
Found the fellow Volvo user?