Jaroslav Sure. But not only metal. All music needs bandwidtw up to 100kHz. Ears
Jaroslav cannot hear stable sinus frequency, but music is not sinus; music is
Jaroslav impulses, that have more energy at band 20kHz, and you can hear it all (by
Jaroslav not by ears and only impulses, not sinus).
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Given a high bitrate encoding of a track, is there a good way
to produce a
lower bitrate encoding from it?
lame --mp3input -h -b 96 highbitrate.mp3 lowbitrate.mp3
Does MP3 data allow
mathematical magic to
produce a lower bitrate file
Hello Naoki,
Thursday, July 13, 2000, 9:10:08 AM, you wrote:
Jaroslav Sure. But not only metal. All music needs bandwidtw up to 100kHz. Ears
Jaroslav cannot hear stable sinus frequency, but music is not sinus; music is
Jaroslav impulses, that have more energy at band 20kHz, and you can hear
I looked up in my notes and found that when I was first looking into
this, I measured the layer II (ISO code, encode, decode) delay: it was
about 480 (plus or minus a few samples). Layer II uses *only* the
polyphase filterbank (same one used in layer III) so this further
sugested the
I own a couple of AKG- k70
Are these crap or are they considered "good" or even "pro" headphones?
i really haven't found any reviews yet... how well do they stand up to the
ones you guys are using ?
--
MP3 ENCODER mailing list ( http://geek.rcc.se/mp3encoder/ )
"Eric.Howgate" wrote:
Whilst sample rate is up for discussion, - could
somebody confirm what is the quality of broadcast
FM music is in terms of sample rate ? When
recording from the radio via line-in Cool Edit
shows the source as 16 bit stereo @ 32KHz.
It is an analogue (analog for you