Quote from: Bob on December 05, 2014, 10:27:20 PM
Well I am not sure about that going onto bandcamp now this is what is available to me
(This album https://lesbian.bandcamp.com/album/forestelevision)
Standard high-quality formats:
MP3 V0 - 85.2MB
MP3 320 - 101.6MB
Audiophiles and Nerds:
FLAC - 312.4MB
AAC - 77.1MB
Ogg Vorbis - 62.3MB
ALAC - 348.8MB
So yes there is a higher or bigger file option but I can rip a CD using windows media player as a lossless audio file and it can be up to 600 to 700 MB in size or more. For instance a bandcamp release at 54.39 length I can download it as FLAC 355MB or even ALAC 365MB but a CD I have ripped at 61.3 min length is 627 MB in size.
So I would say I think an audio file at 355MB is a perfectly good enough quality to listen to but I do think I can get better quality with a CD rip. Maybe for some albums a very big file will not suit it because it is not a very high quality recording in the first place so to have it a really large file might be useless for some things anyway. I still like all formats but I don't think I would listen to a 60 min album at 100 MB it is to low quality. I have never used itunes.
It doesn't sound like you understand the technology involved here. The FLAC (355) and ALAC (365) is the same quality as your 627, but since you're using a poor quality ripper like Windows Media Player, the FLAC and ALAC are actually higher quality than your CD rip. You're going on size of files, and it is inconsequential. There is no loss in the FLAC or ALAC numbers. They are all
lossless.
In your Lesbian example, the FLAC and ALAC are the same as having the full wav. They've been compressed (but not altered) in their container. As I said, you don't appear to have a good grasp on what technology is in use here or what happens in the various processes.
The MP3s, AAC, and Ogg are all
lossy and not part of this discussion, but you're associating them all with lossy because you're confused into thinking 627 automatically means better than the FLAC and ALAC numbers. You could send me a wav file of a song of your choice, and we could look at its wav form. Then we could take a look at the FLAC or ALAC wav form of that same track and it would be identical to the wav image. It's all lossless. This would not be the case for MP3, AAC, or Ogg, because they are lossy.
Again, that FLAC (355) and ALAC (365) is higher quality than the 627 Windows Media Player rip, but only because Windows Media Player is a poor tool. Windows Media Player doesn't rip bit for bit, so it isn't identical to your CD. If you were using better software, they would all be of identical quality.
wav = AIFF/AIF = FLAC = ALAC. These are all identical files, though their sizes differ.