by Flack » Wed May 25, 2011 9:09 pm
I've gone back and forth on this issue a few times.
Personally, I ruled out all the formats like AAC and WMA that wouldn't play on everything. That also included OGG, which I think is a little better than MP3, but if nothing plays it then who cares. That pretty much leaves you with WAV, FLAC, and MP3.
FLAC files are compressed WAV files with no data loss. I guess in a way they're like zip files, if you could run files while zipped, hah. FLAC files, depending on the level of compression, can be a little bit smaller than WAV files or a lotta bit smaller. Here's a real word example.
Metallica's Black album, when ripped to WAV, is 640 meg, give or take a few. I just searched Usenet, and there's a copy of the same album in FLAC format that's 820 meg. That one also has PAR files and album covers, but still ... that's bigger than the original! I checked my server, and I ripped the album using VBR. It's 100 meg, w/12 songs.
More players support WAV files than FLAC files, which is how things like TVersity are able to stream FLAC files to the PS3 -- they're transcoding them to WAV files on the fly, which the PS3 supports. It takes a lot of server resources to do, apparently.
I can't tell the difference between good (256k+) and FLAC files on my computer speakers. I can't tell the difference between CDs and MP3s in my car (w/Bose speakers) or in my computer room (w/Infinity speakers). I CAN tell with my old tuner and my old JBL speakers. Fortunately, years of listening to loud music have taken the edge off my hearing and I really have to concentrate to hear any kind of difference.
For me personally, the difference isn't noticeable enough to deal with the hassle (and additional storage needs). If I were you, I would download a couple of albums in FLAC format and a couple in high quality (VBR, 256, or 320) bit rates and compare the two. High bit rate mp3s sound pretty damn good, and more than that, are a lot more convenient. At least this week. ;)
I've gone back and forth on this issue a few times.
Personally, I ruled out all the formats like AAC and WMA that wouldn't play on everything. That also included OGG, which I think is a little better than MP3, but if nothing plays it then who cares. That pretty much leaves you with WAV, FLAC, and MP3.
FLAC files are compressed WAV files with no data loss. I guess in a way they're like zip files, if you could run files while zipped, hah. FLAC files, depending on the level of compression, can be a little bit smaller than WAV files or a lotta bit smaller. Here's a real word example.
Metallica's Black album, when ripped to WAV, is 640 meg, give or take a few. I just searched Usenet, and there's a copy of the same album in FLAC format that's 820 meg. That one also has PAR files and album covers, but still ... that's bigger than the original! I checked my server, and I ripped the album using VBR. It's 100 meg, w/12 songs.
More players support WAV files than FLAC files, which is how things like TVersity are able to stream FLAC files to the PS3 -- they're transcoding them to WAV files on the fly, which the PS3 supports. It takes a lot of server resources to do, apparently.
I can't tell the difference between good (256k+) and FLAC files on my computer speakers. I can't tell the difference between CDs and MP3s in my car (w/Bose speakers) or in my computer room (w/Infinity speakers). I CAN tell with my old tuner and my old JBL speakers. Fortunately, years of listening to loud music have taken the edge off my hearing and I really have to concentrate to hear any kind of difference.
For me personally, the difference isn't noticeable enough to deal with the hassle (and additional storage needs). If I were you, I would download a couple of albums in FLAC format and a couple in high quality (VBR, 256, or 320) bit rates and compare the two. High bit rate mp3s sound pretty damn good, and more than that, are a lot more convenient. At least this week. ;)