MP3 Turns 25: A look back at how it came to be, and why it took over the world

Discussion in 'other software & services' started by guest, Jul 28, 2020.

  1. guest

    guest Guest

    MP3 Is 25 Years Old!
    July 27, 2020
    https://hackaday.com/2020/07/27/mp3-is-25-years-old/
     
  2. stapp

    stapp Global Moderator

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    Nice read !!
     
  3. Hadron

    Hadron Registered Member

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    Does anyone know his / her name?
    What was the name of the software?
     
    Last edited: Jul 28, 2020
  4. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

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    The MP3 deserves a place in history, but I will never use it again unless there is no other option. Lossless formats like FLAC are ideal. When compatibility is an issue Standard WMA sounds better at the same file size and bit rate.
     
  5. Surt

    Surt Registered Member

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    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MP3
    And see footnote 59.

    Fraunhofer is dead. Long live Fraunhofer! :D
     
  6. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

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    AAC is probably even more compatible. Keep in mind mp3, aac, wma are coding formats. There are many encoder software implementing slightly different algorithms. You may have two files in AAC with the same bitrate, but different quality due to this differences and even the same encoder can be instructed to produce better audio at the expense of more time to encode it.
    For open-source audio Opus is probably the most widespread format used today.
     
  7. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

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    I find AAC to be very similar to WMA in sound quality. Unfortunately you have to wrap them as m4a to tag them and even then my car won't read them. WMA and MP3 seem to be the most popular taggable formats I have encountered. I've yet to see any car audio that plays any of the open source formats. Doesn't mean it doesn't exist, but I have not encountered it.
     
  8. EASTER

    EASTER Registered Member

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    Good article. Thanks
     
  9. Hadron

    Hadron Registered Member

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  10. Rasheed187

    Rasheed187 Registered Member

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    I still have hundreds of MP3 files on my disk, mostly Hip Hop and R&B. I downloaded them back in 2007-2010, after that most of these "illegal" sites were shutdown. I play them with good old Winamp, sound quality is pretty good.
     
  11. Surt

    Surt Registered Member

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    Sound quality has almost everything to do with playback gear given an expert ability to encode.

    On my old school component system, analog Onkyo amp and pre-cheapo KLH speakers, an MP3 ripped from a music CD on a USB stick in my Blu-ray player is at best tolerable wherein the same piece on the music CD in my CD player (which doesn't do MP3) having high end Sony DAC and DSP chips is outstanding.

    The same tune's MP3 (on a disc) and music CD played on my 2003 S-10 Chevy's stock AM/FM/CD player and speakers, practically undetectable, quality being masked by the inferior gear and cabin/road noise. Next chance I get, I might try that comparison in my pal's Caddy CT-6...

    Given I don't use earbuds or a headphones, when mobile with my Galaxy tablet and Bluetooth speaker or in the Chevy, the coding format has little relevance to an audiophile's listening experience. It's been several years since I've done any ripping, but if I do, I'll stick with MP3 as it's what I know.

    MP3's are what Amazon sells, exclusively as far as I know, for what little I've bought in the recent past when there was no CD choice.
     
    Last edited: Aug 8, 2020
  12. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

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    Format comparision is usually made at the same bitrate/file size and of course assumption is that format is lossy.
     
  13. Surt

    Surt Registered Member

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    Format comparison is made by my ears. :D
     
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