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In Reply to: RE: someone would have created a business to do that already. posted by JaroTheWise on August 11, 2015 at 22:42:15
I think you have to look at file resolution with a grain of salt. Having a larger file size may or
may not actually give you the capability to hear more musicality from a recording ! There really is no definitive answers here !
The funny thing here is that the dynamic contrast of many CDs are much greater than you
would have believed they were if you simply listen to the same files from a hard drive or
even a CDr you've burned from those files.
In this case it's not a matter of increasing the file size but rearranging how the information is
being presented that has changed how the music is being resolved .
That being said I have a tweaked disc player I still enjoy but I listen to a lot of music from
my Auraliti PK100 that wasn't derived from High Rez files that I'm honestly not thinking about
what the file size might have been ( though I do some file modifications to these dBPoweramp ripped files in JRMC before dropping them onto a Hard Drive for play)
Follow Ups:
...the difference between MP3/AAC and CD - CD is 1,411kbps (kilobytes per second) where a AAC at 320kbps has removed 1,091kbps of information.
"...the difference between MP3/AAC and CD - CD is 1,411kbps (kilobytes per second) where a AAC at 320kbps has removed 1,091kbps of information."
Incorrect. The actual amount of information removed is no more than about 530 kbps.
The original CD has 1411 kbps of data per second, but much of this data is redundant. For virtually all audio tracks the effective amount of information is no more than 60% of the raw data, as evidenced by the ability of lossless CODECs such as FLAC to recover all the information in the original file with a data rate no more than about 850 kbps.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
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