Craig White wrote: > On Sat, 2006-02-18 at 17:20 -0700, Alan Dayley wrote: > >>-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >>Hash: SHA1 >> >>John Wheat wrote: >> >>> I have noticed that MP3 support is rather limited with linux, >>>therefore, would Ogg be a suitable alternative considering I like to >>>burn CD's of mixed songs in my collection. The format used would need to >>>be easily converted to Wav so they can be burned to CDr's any >>>suggestions on this? >> >>I am confused when you say that "MP3 support is rather limited with >>linux" I currently have no less than 5 (maybe more) different audio >>players on my Fedora system that can play MP3s. The legality of the >>software that encodes and decodes MP3 may be up for debate but support >>for the format is not limited. >> >>Ogg is a suitable alternative which I would use more, if I had a >>portable player that supported. Players that support Ogg are few and >>far between. I have an iPod Nano (provided as a gift) but do not use >>the Apple ACC format since I don't and won't use iTunes. My only other >>iPod supported choice is MP3. So, I rip my CDs to MP3. > > ---- > I am not knowledgeable about these things but I definitely remember > reading that the aac format (which isn't Apple but is part of mpeg4) 128 > bit compression is similar in size to 128 bit mp3 compression but it > would take 160 bit compression in mp3 to get a similar quality of sound > and that is why I am using that with my iPod (not because it's Apple or > because I do use iTunes...sometimes). > > I think that mp3 has been around longer and thus had it's roots set into > concrete whereas the newer formats that Ogg and aac can achieve better > audio quality at equal compression rates. > > Anyway, the obvious choice for storage is no loss and WAV and Flac can > give you that - of course the amount of storage space used is > considerably greater. Once you have stored the 'no loss' format file, > you can run conversions into most any format you need pretty simply. I > believe that on a few of the CD's that I ripped on Linux, I ripped to > wav and then converted to aac, that the aac was approximately 10% of the > size of the wav file. I have a CD/DVD combo drive in my Windows box > which sometimes struggles reading CD's that a CD only drive seems to > handle just fine. > > My attraction to iTunes was really simple...it has a mode of auto rip, > save and eject which allowed me to scan my entire cd collection on my > Windows box without ever looking at the screen - which was a big plus > since I rarely use my Windows box anyway. It took a couple of weeks to > scan them all in. The result was uploaded to my iPod which was very cool > and the only issue was that iTunes stored all of the music files in my > roaming profile so the first time I logged off, it took more than 24 > hours to store the profile on my file server. I have since moved the > iTunes data store to a shared drive rather than in the roaming > profile ;-) > > The single obvious benefit to mp3 is that it has been around and is > supported by most devices and software. > > Craig > what are you using to do your ripping and conversions? John --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss