I'm looking to adjust the bitrate of my iTunes library, but I'd like to know which format (AAC or MP3) is better at 128kbps.
If so, each of those "albums" would have to be about 23 minutes long. 4 album sides per GB seems a bit more accurate....If storage space is no object, go with AIFF, even though 4 albums usually take up 1 GB using AIFF. AIFF, if you don't know already, is a lossless format; if you don't know that either, then Google it....If you care a lot about audio quality, then the obvious choice would be to get the lowest-space lossless format you can find.
AAC has a better encoding than MP3. If storage space is no object, go with AIFF, even though 4 albums usually take up 1 GB using AIFF. AIFF, if you don't know already, is a lossless format....
Before you permanently destroy the sound quality of your music, note that iTunes can adjust the bitrate while it puts music onto your iPod, iPhone, or iPad, leaving the contents of your library intact.
AAC, definitely. 128 kbps is the highest bit rate where major differences in codecs can be noticed without specialized equipment. If you absolutely positively MUST save every MB of space by going with 128 kbps, go AAC.
(I most often listen to music on my iPhone while bike commuting, so with so much road/wind noise, 128 kbps is just fine, so I use the "downsample" check box. At home, I generally use 256 kbps AAC, with the occasional album ripped/transcoded-from-FLAC to ALAC.
The source/original files are mp3. Won't they lose quality if I re-encode them to AAC.
Well, just keep telling yourself that. Lots of people do, but I'm afraid they are all wrong. There is still a huge difference between even 256 kbps compressed AAC quality and uncompressed CD quality. Bass is either muddy or mostly MIA, cymbals are swishy, separation suffers, and stereo imaging is "undefined", to put it diplomatically....I most often listen to music on my iPhone while bike commuting, so with so much road/wind noise, 128 kbps is just fine...
The source/original files are mp3. Won't they lose quality if I re-encode them to AAC.
The source/original files are mp3. Won't they lose quality if I re-encode them to AAC.
Well, just keep telling yourself that. Lots of people do, but I'm afraid they are all wrong. There is still a huge difference between even 256 kbps compressed AAC quality and uncompressed CD quality.
What bitrate MP3? If you're talking about re-encoding to 128 kbps, you're losing quality, period. But if you want to get the best sound for the file size, AAC is the way to go.
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First, re-read my exact quote. When wearing sweatproof headphones while bike commuting in traffic with wind noise, car noise, often rain noise, etc, I can't tell the difference between full CD quality and 128 kbps MP3, much less 256 kbps AAC and CD quality.
Also, the vast majority of people are not audiophiles, and can't tell the difference between 256 kbps AAC and uncompressed. Even audiophiles have a hard time telling the difference between 320 kbps AAC and uncompressed. Do an ABX test with good quality headphones, and you may be able to tell 320. Do an ABX test with the standard headphones most people use daily, and I doubt even an audiophile would be able to tell 256.
Yes, I would love a world in which all of my music were available in lossless format, with all extras possible, yet only take up 5-10 MB per track. But we're not there yet. For mobile devices, if you want a reasonable amount of songs, you MUST make the tradeoff. It's not ignorance, it's not that people are 'wrong', it's reality.
Opinion is opinion. It's your opinion that 256 kbps is bad compared to uncompressed. It's not fact. Fact is that there is a measurable difference. Opinion is that the difference is enough to be below an individual's tolerable threshold. In my opinion, 256 kbps AAC is plenty for nearly every use, nearly every piece of music. In your opinion, it's not. But that opinion is up to each individual to make on their own. So telling people "they are all wrong" just makes you look like an elitist prick.
another vote for aac.
personally, i like 320kbps though. I've ripped and reripped so many times from 128, to 192, to 256, to 320. (still not done with 320). I should've just done it right the first time.
You should be doing it "right" and use ALAC (or FLAC). Then you would never have to do it again.Now you have to look forward to re ripping again.
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You should be doing it "right" and use ALAC (or FLAC). Then you would never have to do it again.Now you have to look forward to re ripping again.
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And the thread starter asked how to best convert from 320 KBit to something lower![]()
I'm looking to adjust the bitrate of my iTunes library, but I'd like to know which format (AAC or MP3) is better at 128kbps.