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> Re: A hot street recorder>These things seem great--but is mp3 really > equivalent to CD sound quality? > > Yes -- or better (or worse) based on sampling rate and quality of input > (i.e. audio source, gear, audio-digital conversion etc.) What?! While adaptive CODECs like MP3 and its cousin ATRAC (used in MDs and the late unlamented CD-I) are very impressive for the fidelity of their reproduction, I have yet to hear an MP3 that's equal in quality to uncompressed CD sound quality. A classic gotcha. You record a concert on MD and one of the instruments is too low. But when you try to use EQ to bring the instrument out, all sorts of nasties occur (usually, the instrument is "muddy" because the perceptual encoding has taken away all its bandwidth). "Rooms" and tails of natural reverbs also take a nasty hit with these compression methods, particularly if there is a loud sound while the tail of a previous sound is still echoing. Now, if you started with a much better quality of uncompressed recording, say 24-bit/96K, and didn't compress too much, then it's perfectly conceivable that you would get something as good, perhaps even better. But I have yet to hear this and I've listened to a LOT of compressed audio (and I'm not THAT picky...) If you start with 16/44 audio, it's absolutely impossible for the compressed sound to be better than the original and mathematically it's impossible for it to be the same (though for a lot of applications it's impossible for me to tell the difference at a low compression ratio, which makes it "the same" as far as I'm concerned...) Back to lurking now. /t --------------------------------------------- This message was sent using Endymion MailMan. http://www.endymion.com/products/mailman/