paulhaneberg wrote:
>
> Although I would never consider MP3s as a substitute for a lossless
> medium such as a CD, (remembering of course that much recording is
> done at 24 bits, so it's somewhat questionable in this day and age
> to actually consider a CD as lossless,)
It's more of an issue of what is "less lossy". If I have a CD source and an MP3
source of the same material, why would I ever want to hear the MP3 version?
> MP3s are great in some
> applications. They are great for listening in your car, where the
> noise floor is often so high that the losses are unnoticeable.
Yes, agreed.
> They
> are also a great format for portability. I listen to my iPod often
> while away on business trips, etc.
Yup, but in my case, I encode everything in lossless compressed format. Works
like a champ.
> I also often listen to CDs in
> MP3 format at the office, where I'm too busy to listen critically
> and really can't devote the attention to listen critically anyway.
It guess it's all in our backgrounds. I grew up listening to the cheap sounding
effects processors of the late 1980s and hating it, and I hear that same poor
quality in MP3 as well. At any bitrate.
> And, like it or not, most of the listening public cannot even tell
> the difference between an MP3 and the lossless version it came from.
Yeah, and I don't like that. That means those of us who do appreciate the better
quality are left out in the cold by the uneducated masses. It sucks!
> Any alternative to mass distribution by the few remaining record
> companies is certainly welcome.
Agreed wholeheartedly! I'm hoping that big record companies get completely sunk.
-->Neil