Settings for Lame MP3/Blade DLL/Internal MP3 encoder:



This paragraph describes the options for the encoder mentioned above. 
However, not all options might be available for certain encoders.

Bitrate (default value 128 Kbits/s):

Determines the number of bits per second.

Mode (default value Stereo):

With the LAME encoder, you can specify how the file is encoded. The default 
stereo option is recommended, but at lower bit-rates, the Joint-stereo or 
Forced stereo can yield better sound quality.


  Stereo: In this mode, the encoder makes no use of potential similarity 
between the two input channels. It can, however, negotiate the bit demand 
between both channels, i.e. give one channel more bits if the other contains 
silence.

  Joint stereo: In this mode, the encoder will make use of a correlation 
between both channels. The signal will be matrixed into a sum ("mid") and 
difference ("side") signal. For quasi-mono signals, this will give a 
significant gain in encoding quality. This mode does not destroy phase 
information like IS stereo that may be used by other encoders. This setting 
can be used to encode DOLBY ProLogic surround signals.


  force joint stereo:  This mode will force MS joint stereo on all frames. 
It's faster and it uses some special mid and side masking threshold.

  Mono: This option will forcibly generate a mono file; if the input file is 
a stereo file, the input stream will be read as a mono by averaging the left 
and right channels.



Quality (default value Normal):



With the LAME encoder, you can specify the output quality; thus you can 
trade off encoding time against sound quality. The default (normal) is 
recommended for the lower bitrates (<160 kbps), high quality for bitrates 
 >160 kbps. The voice  quality is more or less optimized to generate the best 
quality for voice. Details of the R3Mix quality option can be found at 
http://www.r3mix.net.



MPEG-I/II setting (default value MPEG-I):



The difference between MPEG-I and MPEG-II are the sample frequencies of the 
input file. MPEG-I can handle input streams (WAV files) with a sample 
frequency of 48000, 44100 and 32000 Hz. MPEG-II on the other hand will 
support stream for 24000, 22050 160000 Hz. Basically, use MPEG-II when you 
want to encode with low bit rates (e.g. for voice files, or if you need 
small MP3 files with reduced quality). As you can see, the lowest bit-rate 
for MPEG-II is 8 Kbits/sec while for MPEG-I the lowest bit rate is 32 
Kbits/s.



VBR Method Setting



The VBR method setting allows you the change the VBR algorithm which is used 
for the encoding (detailed information can be found in the LAME user 
documentation - see http://www.sulaco.org/mp3/doc/html/index.html). The 
following selections are available



  Disabled: Don't use VBR; instead encodie with a Constant Bit Rate (CBR)
  VBR-Default: Use the default VBR method (currently set to VBR-MTRH)
  VBR-Old: LAME's first functional approach, based on masking,  bisection in 
the bit domain.
  VBR-New: LAME's second approach, based on masking and direct noise 
allocation.
  VBR-MTRH: a combination of old and new (VBR) routines
  VBR-ABR: The Average Bit Rate (ABR) setting, the encoding principle is 
similar to  what AAC uses as VBR encoding, it is based on perceptual 
entropy, but more like CBR than VBR.  When you select the ABR option in the 
VBR Settings box, the ABR edit box will be enabled.  In this edit box you 
can specify the target average bit rate. Of course, a larger bit rate will 
yield generally better-sounding (but larger) MP3 files.



ABR Settings



VBR Quality Setting



This option allows you to set the Variable bit-rate option. Variable 
bit-rate encoding will enable dynamically determined bit-rates that depend 
on the music content of the current frame. This improves the overall quality 
of the encoded file without increasing the file size. This option sets the 
criteria used to determine when to increase the bit-rate for a frame. The 
lower the number, the lower the criteria will be. Thus VBR_0 will yield the 
best quality (but the largest file size) while VBR_9 will have less sound 
quality but the file size will be the smallest. The recommended variable 
bit-rate option is VBR_4. If you don't want VBR encoding, set this option to 
None.



Private



When enabled, it will set the private flag in the MP3 stream.



Original



When enabled, it will set the original flag in the MP3 stream.



Copyright



When enabled, it will set the copyright flag in the MP3 stream.



Checksum



When enabled, it will add a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) code in each 
frame, allowing  [the decoding software] to detect transmission errors that 
could occur on the MP3 stream. However, it takes 16 bits per frame that 
would otherwise be used for encoding, and therefore will slightly (probably 
imperceptibly) reduce the sound quality.





Kevin
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "albert griffith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'PC Audio Discussion List'" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2007 9:16 AM
Subject: RE: A CDEX question:


>I tried to enter their help files but was told it's not in a format used by
> windows any longer.  are there separate help files somewhere?  I'm using
> Vista and this help files problem isn't uncommon.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Behalf Of Kevin Lloyd
> Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2007 1:56 AM
> To: PC Audio Discussion List
> Subject: Re: A CDEX question:
>
> These sound like the quality settings for variable bitrate.  If I remember
> correctly, 0 means highest quality.  Check out the CDEX help pages for 
> more
> imformation, there's some useful stuff about settings in there.
>
> Kevin
> E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "albert griffith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "'PC Audio Discussion List'" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
> Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2007 6:11 AM
> Subject: A CDEX question:
>
>
>> On the first page of the preferences it asks me to choose an encoder.  I
>> do
>> and it asks me for a compression level.  I don't know what the numbers, 1
>> through 9 mean.  I'm familiar with bit rates and such and I've seen
>> numbers
>> with corresponding values but there seem to be none of those here.  so,
>> how
>> do I interpret these?  thanks
>>
>> Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
>> http://www.pc-audio.org
>>
>> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>
>
>
> Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
> http://www.pc-audio.org
>
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>
>
>
> Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
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> 



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