Why We Should Buy Music In FLAC 550
soodoo writes "We have plenty of HDD space and broadband internet. Why don't we demand full CD quality audio in an accessible format from online music stores? The advantage of lossless compression is not only the small audio quality improvement, but better future-proofing and converting capabilities. FLAC is a good, free and open format, well suited for this job."
Compatibility (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Seems fairly obvious why not (Score:5, Informative)
For example, Harper-Collens has put a limit on how many times a library can use a copy of an ebook http://ebooks.dreamwidth.org/32051.html [dreamwidth.org] The book can only be circulated 26 times before the DRM license runs out.
This is outrageous and stupid. If possible, boycott all their products.
Re:FLAC is bullshit (Score:2, Informative)
Obviously you're joking, but just in case you're not:
Converting a lossy format (MP3) into a lossless format (FLAC) will not magically restore the bits lost in the original conversion to MP3.
What you're doing is the equivalent of taking an 800x600 image, scaling it down to 1x1, saving it, re-opening it, scaling it back up to 800x600 and complaining that all you have is a single colour image rather than the original.
Re:If you want CD-quality audio, buy CDs (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Compatibility (Score:4, Informative)
Portable support is not the point. Being able to batch encode is. I've been ripping my CDs for years. When I gave up on the whole OGG Vorbis thing and went back to MP3, no problem. When I switched to iTunes + iPhone, no problem encoding to AAC. No decrease in quality transcoding from one lossy format to another. No doubt I'll want to re-enocde again in the future if there is an improvement in the encoders.
Re:Compatibility (Score:5, Informative)
As to portable media players supporting FLAC:
Sandisk (Sansa Fuze, Fuze+, Clip, Clip+)
iRiver (B30, E100, E150, E200, Lplayer, P7, Spinn, S100)
Archos (Vision 3, 24, 28, 32)
Samsung (Yepp M1, YP-Q1, YP-Q2, YP-Q3, YP-R0, YP-R1)
Philips (GoGear Muse)
Sweex (MP470, MP480)
Transcend (MP860, Tsonic 870)
and last but not least,
Cowon/iAudio (all of them)
Prices:
The most affordable player capable of FLAC (and Ogg Vorbis), the Sweex MP480 Vidi 8GB, from GBP 22 (ca USD 35) in the U.K.
Re:If you want CD-quality audio, buy CDs (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Compatibility (Score:4, Informative)
The big issue with FLAC isn't just player compatibility, but storage. I have a few 24-bit/96kHz FLAC-encoded albums, averaging over a gigabyte each in size. Unless you're using one of the hard-drive equipped Archos devices or something similar (if anyone else uses HDD anymore), you're not going to keep many albums on your player this way.
You're also probably listening via earbuds, maybe some better cans if you really care, but still... there's not that much need for the higher quality on a portable device. Unless you're using a Cowon device, you may not have the audio chops in the device hardware needed to get much better sound out of these files, either. But it's nice to know you can play that latest HDtracks download without the need to transcode.
And for those living in the 21rst century (dedicated audio players being so 1990s), FLAC is also supported in many Android media players.
Re:If you want CD-quality audio, buy CDs (Score:5, Informative)
Also, what the hell are you going to do with a CD once you have it but rip it?"
Sell it used.
At which point you are required to destroy the original, as I understand it.