doggyd69b
Platinum Member
I thought 192 was the top of the MP3 quality, I have not been keeping up with the stats of the different formats but anyway. MP3 was created because someone realized that our capacity to hear frequencies is limited so they decided to delete the parts that we can't hear to reduce file sizes. then someone decided to compress the files in order to be able to add more songs to a player or a home recorded cd. Then other formats came along that touted lossless (they don't lose fidelity* when compressed) *Fidelity = How close to the original recording they can get.I have six large USB sticks that I keep in my vehicle. Rock / Prog&Metal / POP-R&B-Soul / Jazz / Country / Classical
Each one will hold a few hundred LPs. Even with an MP3 bit rate of a paltry 192 kB, they sound just fine.... I mean, five months of the year my auto background noise is snow tires. I go for quantity over audio purism. On the way to a company meeting a few years ago one of my coworkers asked... "You got any, like... Deep Purple, or Zep, or Pink Floyd?" I said yes, and they asked which albums. My answer was... all of them!![]()
Back in the day it mattered because in order for a computer to digitize analog audio files, it had to do several passes, each pass meant more processing but also meant higher fidelity so MP3s gave you like... I believe 3 choices from lower quality to higher, but this again was before all those lossless formats came along.
Now (present time) the crappiest computer can handle processing any of those formats no problem. (I mean when recording not when playing them).
I used to have an old Ipod 160Gb with about 60000 songs just because I could, (the military was worse than Napster since we all had hard drives full of music that we exchanged....then I realized that I don't listen to 3/4 of them because I don't care for country or rap or similar so I deleted most them and kept 14000 songs which I still have plus a few thousand that I have added since back in 2005.
I don't listen to radio because I can't stand commercials and also that they keep playing the same 12 songs every hour... plus I don't like for someone (the music execs) to tell me what I should like and then attempting to drill it into my head by constantly playing it. No, I stopped listening to radio some 42 years ago.