Well I hate to admit that I'm a little ignorant about this topic.... but I need some education. What are the main differences and in your opinion why is one better than the other or worse than the other.Suggestions as what to purchase would also be appreciated along with your opinions. thanks guys............
I've got a 5th Gen. 30gb iPod video. Cant imagine life without it.
iTunes uses the AAC compression system, rather than MP3. This is supposedly a superior way of compressing files and allows you to have a smaller file without sacrificing quality. Therefore, you store more music on your iPod and hard drive.
Quote from: RazorX on June 03, 2008, 07:15:12 PMiTunes uses the AAC compression system, rather than MP3. This is supposedly a superior way of compressing files and allows you to have a smaller file without sacrificing quality. Therefore, you store more music on your iPod and hard drive.One quick corrections: iTunes BOUGHT music uses AAC compression. Music you load into your library doesn't have to be in AAC format. You are not forced to use it. But I do agree that AAC is an impressive file system as I've managed to get 1746 songs unto an 8gb phone using nothing but 128 kbps AAC songs. But that's just for the phone. I store the original files of those songs on my laptops hard drive in iTunes also and they are all 192kpbs and up MP3 files.
128kbps AAC compression give optimal quality and minimal space usage. However several of my albums are ripped in FLAC compression which uses about 3 times as much space.The quality is superior to 128 and even 192 and 320.Krypton what program do you use to take .avi movies into mp4 format?
Quote from: SonOfKrypton on June 03, 2008, 07:21:45 PMQuote from: RazorX on June 03, 2008, 07:15:12 PMiTunes uses the AAC compression system, rather than MP3. This is supposedly a superior way of compressing files and allows you to have a smaller file without sacrificing quality. Therefore, you store more music on your iPod and hard drive.One quick corrections: iTunes BOUGHT music uses AAC compression. Music you load into your library doesn't have to be in AAC format. You are not forced to use it. But I do agree that AAC is an impressive file system as I've managed to get 1746 songs unto an 8gb phone using nothing but 128 kbps AAC songs. But that's just for the phone. I store the original files of those songs on my laptops hard drive in iTunes also and they are all 192kpbs and up MP3 files.Correct. But AAC is the default format, and any music ripped from CDs in iTunes defaults to it unless you change the settings. I purchase most of my MP3s from Amazon, which are 256 kbps files. I've listened to them in the MP3 format and again after converting them to 128 kbps AAC files and can't notice any difference. I usually burn the files to a CD in the original MP3 format and then convert to AAC in iTunes for my iPod. I have over 5,100 songs on my iPod and it's ony about a quarter full.
VisualHub eh, I will recommend that to my friend who uses MAC OS. I use WinFF to convert .avis to mp4.It is good because it will convert it to either 4:3 for full screen or 16:9 for widescreen.My laptop harddrive is 150gb.I've got roughly 40gb in total music and about 10gb in movies. I've got about 10 albums in FLAC compression,they are about 250mb each! They are rare albums that I listen to a lot so I wanted the best quality.
Enter your email address: