WAV tagging on new computer
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
Like I said, there's possibly no scientific explanation for it. But I feel on my ipad, with the kaisertone player, wav definitely has more soundstage than flac. the flac is a bit mp3-ish. Attach that to a pair of elac bs 52.1s through the amp and it's bliss. flac is... meh.Comment
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
A lot of the manner in which we soak in music is psychological, i guess. After so many years and file formats, I say you live only once! If you want to convert everything to 16/44.1 WAV, go for it!! You're not deleting the other files!Comment
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
Very nice. After endless tries, I've settled on V3 Lame for my iphone. Can't tell the difference. Download VOX for playing back lame mp3s, it sounds gorgeous. An improvement over apple's music app.Comment
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
I think you could even convert compressed FLAC back to uncrompressed - seeing as no data is lost?Comment
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
Try it uncompressed. The source data will then be exactly the same as WAV and your player won; thave to unwrap it (that shouldn;t make a difference but you never know). Then you'd hav the soundstage as for WAV with the benefit of FLAC tagging.
I think you could even convert compressed FLAC back to uncrompressed - seeing as no data is lost?Comment
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Re: WAV tagging on new computer
... also includes a FLAC Uncompressed encoding option (which stores audio uncompressed, for those who want WAVE PCM but with better ID Tagging).
It's that last part - WAV PCM but with better ID Tagging - that offers up what many people have been asking for which is an open source uncompressed file format that allows embedded (and widely supported) metadata.Comment
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