On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 7:33 AM, berlinirving <berlinirving@...> wrote:I have begun the process of uploading my JAMs into Mediafire, though it will take a while yet to relabel and finish.
Something I would like to know, though: I customarily convert my wavs to 56 bit mp3s as a good compromise between audio quality and the size of the files. Is this about the files size that most people want, or are bigger, higher quality audio files the way to go?
-----Original Message-----
From: erlogan@...
Sent: Thu, 16 Jul 2009 09:26:33 -0400
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] What mp3 quality do you want?I, for one, would prefer higher quality files (128kbps VBR, at least), but I work with a lot of audio and can hear the difference.
These days, the cost (monetary and otherwise) of transferring and storing data is so cheap, I don't think there's any reason to skimp any more.
--EOn Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 7:33 AM, berlinirving <berlinirving@ yahoo.com> wrote:I have begun the process of uploading my JAMs into Mediafire, though it will take a while yet to relabel and finish.
Something I would like to know, though: I customarily convert my wavs to 56 bit mp3s as a good compromise between audio quality and the size of the files. Is this about the files size that most people want, or are bigger, higher quality audio files the way to go?
--- In just-a-minute@..., Eric Logan <erlogan@...> wrote:
> I, for one, would prefer higher quality files (128kbps VBR, at least), but I
> work with a lot of audio and can hear the difference.
>
> These days, the cost (monetary and otherwise) of transferring and storing
> data is so cheap, I don't think there's any reason to skimp any more.
>
> --E
>
> On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 7:33 AM, berlinirving <berlinirving@...>wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > I have begun the process of uploading my JAMs into Mediafire, though it
> > will take a while yet to relabel and finish.
> >
> > Something I would like to know, though: I customarily convert my wavs to 56
> > bit mp3s as a good compromise between audio quality and the size of the
> > files. Is this about the files size that most people want, or are bigger,
> > higher quality audio files the way to go?
> >
> >
> >
>
--- In just-a-minute@..., "jcms69" <jameschapman@...> wrote:
>
> Yes, a minimum of 128kbps is my preference. BBC& gives only 80 via Digitsl wihich is OK for some things but not the best.
>
> This raises an interesting point. A high bitrate is of little use when the original source was of a lower quality. A recording from a good FM signal will benefit from a high rate; one from an old cassette recording from LW won't.I agree; no point in upsampling where it won't help.
>If you want to downsample (i.e., make smaller files) for your own
> Personally I like to have as many episodes as possible on my MP3 player and then have it on shuffle so I get a random episode each time. So I prefer smaller files as that gives me more on my MP3 player.
>
> Neither do I listen for JaM for the audio quality. Except where the quality significantly detracts from the programme, I prefer content over "quality of signal" every time. Music and speech have (IMHO) very different requirements here.
>
--- In just-a-minute@..., Eric Logan <erlogan@...> wrote:
>
> I agree; no point in upsampling where it won't help.
>
> I have begun the process of uploading my JAMs into Mediafire, though it will take a while yet to relabel and finish.We know bandwidth and disk space are always going to get cheaper, but we don't know when (if ever) the BBC will open up their archives for high-quality episodes.
>
> Something I would like to know, though: I customarily convert my wavs to 56 bit mp3s as a good compromise between audio quality and the size of the files. Is this about the files size that most people want, or are bigger, higher quality audio files the way to go?
> This raises an interesting point. A high bitrate is of little use when the original source was of a lower quality. A recording from a good FM signal will benefit from a high rate; one from an old cassette recording from LW won't.I'd have to disagree with this. A high bitrate won't improve on the original source, but a low bitrate can certainly lessen the quality of an already-bad source.
> Personally I like to have as many episodes as possible on my MP3 player and then have it on shuffle so I get a random episode each time. So I prefer smaller files as that gives me more on my MP3 player.This makes sense to me. However it's fairly easy to downsample an mp3 into a smaller filezie, but impossible to go the other way around and upsample your way into a better sound quality...
> So I think the best archival choice would be a high-quality bitrate (for sound quality), but a variable bitrate (to balance file size). In the mp3 encoder named "lame", I've been doing this with the "-V 0" argument.Just a quick technical point - from a transparency point of view lame V0 is overkill. V2 is sufficient for the psycho-acoustically same sound.
>> So I think the best archival choice would be a high-quality bitrate (for sound quality), but a variable bitrate (to balance file size). In the mp3 encoder named "lame", I've been doing this with the "-V 0" argument.The overkill is Mostly Harmless -- it only comes out to a few MB -- but I think you're right because I just tried it both ways and can't hear any difference at all. I'll start using -V 2. ;)
>
> Just a quick technical point - from a transparency point of view lame V0 is overkill. V2 is sufficient for the psycho-acoustically same sound.
> Better yet would be to rip the stream - in other words, to download the exact stream broadcast on iPlayer (as it is higher quality than on DAB), which avoids the compression process altogether. The file does as a result have the full 36 minutes broadcast on it, but with use of particular tools you can trim the excess without loss of audio quality.That makes sense, but the JAM streams I get from both iPlayer and ABC RN are realaudio, which for better or worse is not a very portable/common compression format. If the BBC ever gets around to switching to AAC as they've discussed, IMO saving the raw feed would be exactly the thing to do.
> Out of interest, how do you capture your JAM mp3s (which I am hugely tremendously grateful for)?For BBC shows: get_iPlayer --get --wav; then audacity to trim the ends.
>Hmm, interesting. I used get_iplayer --get --amode iphone; this produces a 128kbps mp3; then I used DirectWav mp3 splitter (which cuts the mp3 rather than decoding and reencoding) to trim the useless ends. On last week's BBC R7 update this gave me a file lacking the audible (if slight) high-end flutter that the low bitrate Real Audio stream has by default.
> For BBC shows: get_iPlayer --get --wav; then audacity to trim the ends.
>Apologies for the double post, but to make sure nothing is mistransmitted: I use the iphone mode to download, rather than taking it to wav. I can't remember how to do that as command line: I have it preset in my options.
>
> >
> > For BBC shows: get_iPlayer --get --wav; then audacity to trim the ends.
>
> Hmm, interesting. I used get_iplayer --get --amode iphone; this produces a 128kbps mp3; then I used DirectWav mp3 splitter (which cuts the mp3 rather than decoding and reencoding) to trim the useless ends. On last week's BBC R7 update this gave me a file lacking the audible (if slight) high-end flutter that the low bitrate Real Audio stream has by default.
>
> I could upload my copy of that for reference if you'd like; it does seem like the best available.
>
> Robert
>
>> get_iplayer --get --wav; then audacity to trim the ends.I don't know if anyone but you and I are interested in this thread,
> Hmm, interesting. I used get_iplayer --get --amode iphone;
> this produces a 128kbps mp3; then I used DirectWav mp3 splitter
> (which cuts the mp3 rather than decoding and reencoding) to trim
> the useless ends. On last week's BBC R7 update this gave me a
> file lacking the audible (if slight) high-end flutter that the
> low bitrate Real Audio stream has by default.
>
> I could upload my copy of that for reference if you'd like;
> it does seem like the best available.
> I don't know the technicals of how it works, but quality is fine for what I need. Any thoughts would be apprecaited.The quality is certainly sufficient for listening to, and easily beats analogue recordings - but it still suffers from the few problems that any other method suffers from. It does appear to have a rather nice GUI though, which get_iplayer could really do with.
> And while we are talking about downloads, the skipscreen plugin for Firefox is worth checking out, for dealing with those pesky countdown timers on certain sites. ( https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/11243 )Now this is very useful indeed - thanks very much for the tipoff!
> If you edit get_iplayer in a text editor to add "-V 2" to the lameopts argument, the output should be pretty close to ideal as far as mp3 files go.Definitely sounds like the right thing to do, but unfortunately I can't work out how to. Any ideas what to edit to achieve this?
> The next question -- since most media players support .aac -- iswhy not just keep the raw, original .aac files and avoiding the
----- Original Message -----
From: "charles_454545" <charles@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 3:54 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> >> get_iplayer --get --wav; then audacity to trim the ends.
>
> > Hmm, interesting. I used get_iplayer --get --amode iphone;
> > this produces a 128kbps mp3; then I used DirectWav mp3 splitter
> > (which cuts the mp3 rather than decoding and reencoding) to trim
> > the useless ends. On last week's BBC R7 update this gave me a
> > file lacking the audible (if slight) high-end flutter that the
> > low bitrate Real Audio stream has by default.
> >
> > I could upload my copy of that for reference if you'd like;
> > it does seem like the best available.
>
> I don't know if anyone but you and I are interested in this thread,
> but it's certainly helpful to me: after digging into get_iplayer's
> debugging logs, I discovered that it was giving me realaudio files
> instead of aac because I didn't have flvstreamer and ffmpeg
> installed. After installing them, get_player used flvstreamer
> to pull get the flv file, and ffmpeg extracted the raw, unchanged
> aac file from the BBC. :)
>
> Your setup already does this, which is good, but unfortunately
> get_iplayer's next step by default is to decode the aac and
> re-encode it as an mp3 with lame's default settings. So both of
> us are re-encoding to mp3, but you're doing it from better source
> material (aac rather than realaudio). Overalll, your mp3 does
> sound better. But it also introduces some thuddy distortion,
> such as when Nicholas says "clever and erudite" at 0:50. Happily,
> that distortion is not in the original .aac file, so it must be
> a side-effect of get_iplayer's aac->mp3 pass. If you edit
> get_iplayer in a text editor to add "-V 2" to the lameopts argument,
> the output should be pretty close to ideal as far as mp3 files go.
>
> The next question -- since most media players support .aac -- is
> why not just keep the raw, original .aac files and avoiding the
> aac->mp3 transcode step. If we can find a utility to trim the
> extra six minutes off the ends, IMO that would be the Right Thing.
>
> Charles
>
> Charles,That radio app you mentioned sounds pretty nice, and if I
>
> This is all interesting (I do hope that doesn't read as sarcasm), but I use the http://www.nerdoftheherd.com/tools/radiodld/ application. (Free download, I have no connections to site, and have been using it fine for about 12 months)
>
> It checks the BBC website schedules and does all the iplayer download/converting for me, including podcast downloads (RSS).
>
> I don't know the technicals of how it works, but quality is fine for what I need. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>> If you edit get_iplayer in a text editor to add "-V 2" to the lameopts argument, the output should be pretty close to ideal as far as mp3 files go.get_iplayer is a perl script, so you can edit it in any plain old
> Definitely sounds like the right thing to do, but unfortunately I can't work out how to. Any ideas what to edit to achieve this?
>> The next question -- since most media players support .aac --Well, I'll keep uploading mp3s... it's going to be the
>> is why not just keep the raw, original .aac files and avoiding
>> the aac->mp3 transcode step. If we can find a utility to trim
>> the extra six minutes off the ends, IMO that would be the
>> Right Thing.
> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files
> don't appear to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing
> the extension doesn't help either. This is a huge problem for
> me, as iTunes is my central storage for all things JAM.
> Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable format
> for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't
> play it, and car stereos don't usually play it either.
> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There'sDoes trimming the ends and saving as mp4 cause a re-encode?
> Quicktime Pro or, for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is
> useful, because if you trim to the selection (which is not
> immediately obvious, but there's a selection ruler across
> the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in
> iTunes. Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
----- Original Message -----
From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't appear
to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension doesn't help
either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central storage for
all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable format
for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play it, and
car stereos don't usually play it either.
>
> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime Pro or,
for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to the
selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection ruler
across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in iTunes.
Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
>
> Robert
----- Original Message -----
From: "charles_454545" <charles@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:17 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> --- In just-a-minute@..., "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
wrote:
>
> >> If you edit get_iplayer in a text editor to add "-V 2" to the lameopts
argument, the output should be pretty close to ideal as far as mp3 files go.
>
> > Definitely sounds like the right thing to do, but unfortunately I can't
work out how to. Any ideas what to edit to achieve this?
>
> get_iplayer is a perl script, so you can edit it in any plain old
> text editor. After googling around on hydrogen audio for about
> half an hour yesterday, I decided to upgrade to lame 3.98.2 (for
> its improved vbr) and use these arguments: "-q 0 -Y -v".
> So, I edited get_iplayer to replace this line:
>
> $binopts->{lame} = '-f';
>
> with this line:
>
> $binopts->{lame} = '-q 0 -Y -v';
>
> new versions of get_iplayer come out =constantly= so I wish
> there was a way to store these options somewhere :)
>
>
> >> The next question -- since most media players support .aac --
> >> is why not just keep the raw, original .aac files and avoiding
> >> the aac->mp3 transcode step. If we can find a utility to trim
> >> the extra six minutes off the ends, IMO that would be the
> >> Right Thing.
>
> > There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files
> > don't appear to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing
> > the extension doesn't help either. This is a huge problem for
> > me, as iTunes is my central storage for all things JAM.
> > Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable format
> > for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't
> > play it, and car stereos don't usually play it either.
>
> Well, I'll keep uploading mp3s... it's going to be the
> lingua franca of the audio world for some time to come.
> (My Cowon D2+ doesn't support aac, and my personal
> preference would be ogg... ;)
>
>
> > As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's
> > Quicktime Pro or, for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is
> > useful, because if you trim to the selection (which is not
> > immediately obvious, but there's a selection ruler across
> > the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in
> > iTunes. Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
>
> Does trimming the ends and saving as mp4 cause a re-encode?
> Because if it doesn't re-encode, and if the results play
> nicely with iTunes/iPods/etc, that would be very nice indeed...
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
> Someone else is *very* interested in this thread - me!Right. get_iplayer is a perl "glue" script that uses other
>
> I think you will find that flvstreamer is capable on its own of
> capturing the flv stream (which is actually an aac file inside
> an flv wrapper), without any involvement of get_iplayer.
> It's get_iplayer that's converting your aac file to mp3.Right again. This is exactly what get_iplayer is doing --
> If you cut get_iplayer out of the picture you will simply
> get the flv stream, with an aac file wrapped up inside it.
>
> And there are lots of programs which can extract an aac
> file from the flv wrapper, e.g. ffmpeg.
> Please tell me: what Operating System are you using?Fedora 11, which is a version of Linux.
> This makes a *big* difference to how get_iplayer and
> flvstreamer work!
>The extension commonly used by iTunes files is .m4a (which stands for mp4
>audio). This is simply an mp4 file which contains only an audio stream. MP4
>is a video format, so usually has both a video stream and an audio stream.
>
>The program ffmpeg has an option to save a raw .AAC file as an MP4 file
>(with the extension .mp4 or .m4a), without re-encoding the file.
>
>An audio-only MPEG-4 file can be named either .mp4 or .m4a since those types
>of file are both encoded in exactly the same way, but the latter is only
>encoding audio (instead of audio and video).
>
>AAC is a type of MPEG-4 file. But a raw AAC file won't play in iTunes merely
>by changing the file's extension from .aac to .mp4, because you have to do
>more to the file than that! It has to be "muxed" in order to become an mp4
>file. That doesn't involve re-encoding it! It has to do with creating a
>frame header for each frame, one that iTunes can read.
>
>MP4 is a video format, so it uses frames (normally 25 frames per second, the
>standard video format). Each frame has a header (a few bytes, describing the
>audio format of the data stream). FFMPEG can add those headers to the raw
>AAC data, to create a fully valid MP4 file.
>
>Almost *any* player can play an mp4 file (though iTunes might need the
>file's extension to be renamed to .m4a).
>
>Stephen
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
>To: <just-a-minute@...>
>Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
>Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>
>
>> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't appear
>to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension doesn't help
>either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central storage for
>all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable format
>for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play it, and
>car stereos don't usually play it either.
>>
>> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime Pro or,
>for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to the
>selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection ruler
>across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in iTunes.
>Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
>>
>> Robert
>
>
>
>------------------------------------
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:48 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> The format that get_iplayer extracts from the flashaac mode is
> actually "aacPlus", which retains excellent quality in a very small
> file. http://dictionary.zdnet.com/definition/aacplus.html
>
> Unfortunately for Mac users, QuickTime still doesn't support it. On
> a Mac, the only native apps I've found that play aacPlus files are
> VLC and RealPlayer. I run WinAmp in Parallels to convert to wav or
> high-bit m4a then iTunes to transcode to mp3.
>
> Greg
>
> At 6:23 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
> >The extension commonly used by iTunes files is .m4a (which stands for mp4
> >audio). This is simply an mp4 file which contains only an audio stream.
MP4
> >is a video format, so usually has both a video stream and an audio
stream.
> >
> >The program ffmpeg has an option to save a raw .AAC file as an MP4 file
> >(with the extension .mp4 or .m4a), without re-encoding the file.
> >
> >An audio-only MPEG-4 file can be named either .mp4 or .m4a since those
types
> >of file are both encoded in exactly the same way, but the latter is only
> >encoding audio (instead of audio and video).
> >
> >AAC is a type of MPEG-4 file. But a raw AAC file won't play in iTunes
merely
> >by changing the file's extension from .aac to .mp4, because you have to
do
> >more to the file than that! It has to be "muxed" in order to become an
mp4
> >file. That doesn't involve re-encoding it! It has to do with creating a
> >frame header for each frame, one that iTunes can read.
> >
> >MP4 is a video format, so it uses frames (normally 25 frames per second,
the
> >standard video format). Each frame has a header (a few bytes, describing
the
> >audio format of the data stream). FFMPEG can add those headers to the raw
> >AAC data, to create a fully valid MP4 file.
> >
> >Almost *any* player can play an mp4 file (though iTunes might need the
> >file's extension to be renamed to .m4a).
> >
> >Stephen
> >
> >
> >----- Original Message -----
> >From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
> >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> >
> >
> >> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't
appear
> >to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension doesn't
help
> >either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central storage
for
> >all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable
format
> >for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play it,
and
> >car stereos don't usually play it either.
> >>
> >> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime Pro
or,
> >for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to the
> >selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection
ruler
> >across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in iTunes.
> >Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
> >>
> >> Robert
> >
> >
> >
> >------------------------------------
> >
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
----- Original Message -----
From: "charles_454545" <charles@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Monday, July 20, 2009 9:42 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> > Better yet would be to rip the stream - in other words, to download the
exact stream broadcast on iPlayer (as it is higher quality than on DAB),
which avoids the compression process altogether. The file does as a result
have the full 36 minutes broadcast on it, but with use of particular tools
you can trim the excess without loss of audio quality.
>
> That makes sense, but the JAM streams I get from both iPlayer and ABC RN
are realaudio, which for better or worse is not a very portable/common
compression format. If the BBC ever gets around to switching to AAC as
they've discussed, IMO saving the raw feed would be exactly the thing to do.
>You've suggested that the BBC's audio iPlayer files are using HE AAC (a.k.a.
>AAC+). However, according to the BBC website, the BBC uses LC-AAC, not
>AAC-HE.
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
>To: <just-a-minute@...>
>Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:48 PM
>Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>
>
>> The format that get_iplayer extracts from the flashaac mode is
>> actually "aacPlus", which retains excellent quality in a very small
>> file. http://dictionary.zdnet.com/definition/aacplus.html
>>
>> Unfortunately for Mac users, QuickTime still doesn't support it. On
>> a Mac, the only native apps I've found that play aacPlus files are
>> VLC and RealPlayer. I run WinAmp in Parallels to convert to wav or
>> high-bit m4a then iTunes to transcode to mp3.
>>
>> Greg
>>
>> At 6:23 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
>> >The extension commonly used by iTunes files is .m4a (which stands for mp4
>> >audio). This is simply an mp4 file which contains only an audio stream.
>MP4
>> >is a video format, so usually has both a video stream and an audio
>stream.
>> >
>> >The program ffmpeg has an option to save a raw .AAC file as an MP4 file
>> >(with the extension .mp4 or .m4a), without re-encoding the file.
>> >
>> >An audio-only MPEG-4 file can be named either .mp4 or .m4a since those
>types
>> >of file are both encoded in exactly the same way, but the latter is only
>> >encoding audio (instead of audio and video).
>> >
>> >AAC is a type of MPEG-4 file. But a raw AAC file won't play in iTunes
>merely
>> >by changing the file's extension from .aac to .mp4, because you have to
>do
>> >more to the file than that! It has to be "muxed" in order to become an
>mp4
>> >file. That doesn't involve re-encoding it! It has to do with creating a
>> >frame header for each frame, one that iTunes can read.
>> >
>> >MP4 is a video format, so it uses frames (normally 25 frames per second,
>the
>> >standard video format). Each frame has a header (a few bytes, describing
>the
>> >audio format of the data stream). FFMPEG can add those headers to the raw
>> >AAC data, to create a fully valid MP4 file.
>> >
>> >Almost *any* player can play an mp4 file (though iTunes might need the
>> >file's extension to be renamed to .m4a).
>> >
>> >Stephen
>> >
>> >
>> >----- Original Message -----
>> >From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
>> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
>> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
>> >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>> >
>> >
>> >> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't
>appear
>> >to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension doesn't
>help
>> >either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central storage
>for
>> >all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable
>format
>> >for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play it,
>and
>> >car stereos don't usually play it either.
>> >>
>> >> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime Pro
>or,
>> >for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to the
>> >selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection
>ruler
>> >across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in iTunes.
>> >Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
>> >>
>> >> Robert
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >------------------------------------
>> >
>> >Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------
>>
>> Yahoo! Groups Links
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>------------------------------------
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
> I'm only here for a moment to say that it's clear from the earlyWhat mp3 encoder are you using?
> posts that the general preference is to have as good a quality as
> possible, and lesser quality versions can be made if someone wants
> them. While I can't fix those which I have recorded up till now
> that are only 56 bit rate, I shall make future mp3s to equal
> the source.
>
> This leaves me with a question of the quality of the ABC RN
> source, as streamed on the web. What mp3 bit rate would
> equal the web stream?
>
> It's clear that some of you are making better quality recordings
> than anything I produce, as I only record the stream using Sound
> Forge, edit the front and end, lift the volume a bit, save it as a
> wav and convert it to a 56k bit rate mp3.
> The BBC *has* already switched to AAC. If you play a file:)
> using Windows, the BBC's iPlayer plays a flash (flv) stream
> containing an AAC encoded file. (Right-clicking on the iPlayer
> window shows what codec is being employed).
--- In just-a-minute@..., "charles_454545" <charles@...> wrote:
>
> What mp3 encoder are you using?
>
> If "lame", I'd suggest -q 0 -V 2 as the settings.
>
> One important step for the ABC RN sourced files is to make certain
> that the .wav file passed to the mp3 encoder is only a single
> channel. I think that should save space in the end product.
>
> I agree that lightly boosting the volume (and even the bass) is
> necessary on the ABC RN files. It's too bad their streams aren't
> up to par with what the beeb is doing... I'd love to listen to
> RN's "The Night Air" in stereo aac, but that's a different story...
>
> cheers,
> Charles
>
----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 12:00 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> Look at this table from February:
>
http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/2009/02/bbc_test_aac+_streams_overtake_dab_quality.php
> = http://tinyurl.com/dmakzp
> The on-demand stream for Radio 4 is listed as 96k AAC+. It also
> mentions that the Flash window will report simple AAC (not AAC+)
> regardless of which type it is.
> Greg
>
> At 10:07 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
> >You've suggested that the BBC's audio iPlayer files are using HE AAC
(a.k.a.
> >AAC+). However, according to the BBC website, the BBC uses LC-AAC, not
> >AAC-HE.
> >
> >
> >----- Original Message -----
> >From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:48 PM
> >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> >
> >
> >> The format that get_iplayer extracts from the flashaac mode is
> >> actually "aacPlus", which retains excellent quality in a very small
> >> file. http://dictionary.zdnet.com/definition/aacplus.html
> >>
> >> Unfortunately for Mac users, QuickTime still doesn't support it. On
> >> a Mac, the only native apps I've found that play aacPlus files are
> >> VLC and RealPlayer. I run WinAmp in Parallels to convert to wav or
> >> high-bit m4a then iTunes to transcode to mp3.
> >>
> >> Greg
> >>
> >> At 6:23 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
> >> >The extension commonly used by iTunes files is .m4a (which stands for
mp4
> >> >audio). This is simply an mp4 file which contains only an audio
stream.
> >MP4
> >> >is a video format, so usually has both a video stream and an audio
> >stream.
> >> >
> >> >The program ffmpeg has an option to save a raw .AAC file as an MP4
file
> >> >(with the extension .mp4 or .m4a), without re-encoding the file.
> >> >
> >> >An audio-only MPEG-4 file can be named either .mp4 or .m4a since
those
> >types
> >> >of file are both encoded in exactly the same way, but the latter is
only
> >> >encoding audio (instead of audio and video).
> >> >
> >> >AAC is a type of MPEG-4 file. But a raw AAC file won't play in iTunes
> >merely
> >> >by changing the file's extension from .aac to .mp4, because you have
to
> >do
> >> >more to the file than that! It has to be "muxed" in order to become
an
> >mp4
> >> >file. That doesn't involve re-encoding it! It has to do with creating
a
> >> >frame header for each frame, one that iTunes can read.
> >> >
> >> >MP4 is a video format, so it uses frames (normally 25 frames per
second,
> >the
> >> >standard video format). Each frame has a header (a few bytes,
describing
> >the
> >> >audio format of the data stream). FFMPEG can add those headers to the
raw
> >> >AAC data, to create a fully valid MP4 file.
> >> >
> >> >Almost *any* player can play an mp4 file (though iTunes might need
the
> >> >file's extension to be renamed to .m4a).
> >> >
> >> >Stephen
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >----- Original Message -----
> >> >From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
> >> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
> >> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
> >> >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't
> >appear
> >> >to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension
doesn't
> >help
> >> >either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central
storage
> >for
> >> >all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable
> >format
> >> >for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play
it,
> >and
> >> >car stereos don't usually play it either.
> >> >>
> >> >> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime
Pro
> >or,
> >> >for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to
the
> >> >selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection
> >ruler
> >> >across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in
iTunes.
> >> >Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
> >> >>
> >> >> Robert
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >------------------------------------
> >> >
> >> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >>
> >>
> >> ------------------------------------
> >>
> >> Yahoo! Groups Links
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >------------------------------------
> >
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
----- Original Message -----
From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
To: <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 4:42 PM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
> Well, I'm slightly nervous (and rather thrilled) to see so many responses,
just when I was afraid it had become a duologue.
>
> So, I think as far as clarifying anything goes, here's the conclusions I
reached for the optimal way to go about this. Feel free (as you will) to
chip in. This is taking in everything from the posts you've made since my
last.
>
> Firstly, I think we should definitely upload (for BBC streams) an .m4a.
This is the native audio format for iTunes. It can be brought about without
any destructive processes like so:
>
> Configure get_iplayer to download flashaac. Use QuicktimePro to top and
tail, then to save as an .m4a - upload.
>
> As I have QuicktimePro (it's really quite useful for movie editing etc),
and the required programmes already set up to do all of this, I will put
myself forward to carry this out.
>
> This would provide the best quality version there is, and should be used
at least for archival purposes.
>
> Secondly, I think that mp3s should be uploaded. Charles (who usually
bears this burden) has much of the setup already, if not all.
>
> Configure get_iplayer to download flashaac. Import to a sound editor, top
and tail, convert to lame V2. Upload.
>
> The other alternative for mp3s just has a different step - I prefer it, as
it definitely has no destructive steps, but it may be fiddly.
>
> Configure get_iplayer so that it downloads the best quality stream and
converts it to lame V2 mp3. Then use mp3DirectCut (freeware) to top and tail
non-destructively. Upload.
>
> I'm not sure there are refinements to be made really. If anyone can spot
it, that would be great.
>
> I may well trial the .m4a version for this coming series. It should play
on most computers with iTunes or VLC - including Fedora - is technically
better quality, and smaller file size.
>
> If anyone has anything to add, again, feel free - I don't want to feel
imposing.
>
> Robert
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>The BBC were originally using 128kbps mp3 (throughout 2008) on the iPlayer.
>
>The page you mention deals only with some tests they conducted last
>February, at a point when they were considering using a reduced bitrate of
>96kbps, bolstered by AAC+ to offset the bitrate reduction.
>
>Since then they've migrated to 128kbps AAC. The software I use (Winamp 5,
>Media Player Classic, and RTMPdump) reports that they're now using AAC-LC.
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
>To: <just-a-minute@...>
>Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 12:00 AM
>Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>
>
>> Look at this table from February:
>>
>http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/2009/02/bbc_test_aac+_streams_overtake_dab_quality.php
>> = http://tinyurl.com/dmakzp
>> The on-demand stream for Radio 4 is listed as 96k AAC+. It also
>> mentions that the Flash window will report simple AAC (not AAC+)
>> regardless of which type it is.
>> Greg
>>
>> At 10:07 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
>> >You've suggested that the BBC's audio iPlayer files are using HE AAC
>(a.k.a.
>> >AAC+). However, according to the BBC website, the BBC uses LC-AAC, not
>> >AAC-HE.
>> >
>> >
>> >----- Original Message -----
>> >From: "Greg Linden" <gmlinden@...>
>> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
>> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:48 PM
> > >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>> >
>> >
>> >> The format that get_iplayer extracts from the flashaac mode is
>> >> actually "aacPlus", which retains excellent quality in a very small
>> >> file. http://dictionary.zdnet.com/definition/aacplus.html
>> >>
>> >> Unfortunately for Mac users, QuickTime still doesn't support it. On
>> >> a Mac, the only native apps I've found that play aacPlus files are
>> >> VLC and RealPlayer. I run WinAmp in Parallels to convert to wav or
>> >> high-bit m4a then iTunes to transcode to mp3.
>> >>
>> >> Greg
>> >>
>> >> At 6:23 PM +0100 7/22/09, Clitheroe Kid wrote:
>> >> >The extension commonly used by iTunes files is .m4a (which stands for
>mp4
>> >> >audio). This is simply an mp4 file which contains only an audio
>stream.
>> >MP4
>> >> >is a video format, so usually has both a video stream and an audio
>> >stream.
>> >> >
>> >> >The program ffmpeg has an option to save a raw .AAC file as an MP4
>file
>> >> >(with the extension .mp4 or .m4a), without re-encoding the file.
>> >> >
>> >> >An audio-only MPEG-4 file can be named either .mp4 or .m4a since
>those
>> >types
>> >> >of file are both encoded in exactly the same way, but the latter is
>only
>> >> >encoding audio (instead of audio and video).
>> >> >
>> >> >AAC is a type of MPEG-4 file. But a raw AAC file won't play in iTunes
>> >merely
>> >> >by changing the file's extension from .aac to .mp4, because you have
>to
>> >do
>> >> >more to the file than that! It has to be "muxed" in order to become
>an
>> >mp4
>> >> >file. That doesn't involve re-encoding it! It has to do with creating
>a
>> >> >frame header for each frame, one that iTunes can read.
>> >> >
>> >> >MP4 is a video format, so it uses frames (normally 25 frames per
>second,
>> >the
>> >> >standard video format). Each frame has a header (a few bytes,
>describing
>> >the
>> >> >audio format of the data stream). FFMPEG can add those headers to the
>raw
>> >> >AAC data, to create a fully valid MP4 file.
>> >> >
>> >> >Almost *any* player can play an mp4 file (though iTunes might need
>the
>> >> >file's extension to be renamed to .m4a).
> > >> >
>> >> >Stephen
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >----- Original Message -----
>> >> >From: "eriatarkae@..." <eriatarka1@...>
>> >> >To: <just-a-minute@...>
>> >> >Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:56 PM
>> >> >Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: What mp3 quality do you want?
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >> There are a few caveats to this. Firstly, the raw .aac files don't
>> >appear
>> >> >to play in iTunes (Quicktime only), and changing the extension
>doesn't
>> >help
>> >> >either. This is a huge problem for me, as iTunes is my central
>storage
>> >for
>> >> >all things JAM. Secondly, I'm fairly sure that .aac is not a suitable
>> >format
>> >> >for most people's usual use patterns - most mp3 players can't play
>it,
>> >and
>> >> >car stereos don't usually play it either.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> As far as utilities go, they are not freeware. There's Quicktime
>Pro
>> >or,
>> >> >for Macs, Fission. Quicktime Pro is useful, because if you trim to
>the
>> >> >selection (which is not immediately obvious, but there's a selection
>> >ruler
>> >> >across the bottom) and save as an .mp4, then that will play in
>iTunes.
>> >> >Fission - I have no idea, I'm on XP.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Robert
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >------------------------------------
>> >> >
>> >> >Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> ------------------------------------
>> >>
>> >> Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >------------------------------------
>> >
>> >Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------
>>
>> Yahoo! Groups Links
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>------------------------------------
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>Well, it depends on the version you have (although possibly either will work), but it's:
> How do you configure get_iplayer to download flashacc?
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