On your Codec Central page I read:
"Compromise on Space - best lossy would be Musepack above 128 Kbps it cannot be beaten"
This is a complete and utter lie. Ogg Vorbis beats Musepack by tens of percentages. Even MP3 wins from musepack in many circumstances, above 128 kbit/s. Musepack is a very old and buggy codec, shows many artifacts and pre-demands for its source-files to give decent results. MPC loses in all tests (from Ogg Vorbis and AAC) that we've done here at the Dutch national broadcast facilities (NOB) in 2007.
In addition it states:
"Portable Player - for iPod go for the newest m4a, others Windows Media Audio,"
which is also nonsense. Even YouTube is going with LAME 3.97 code for its flash videos. Trust me, they've tested that against others. For portable go with lame MP3 or Ogg Vorbis, or if the firmware requires it with m4a/aac, but even at ~96 kbit/s LAME still wins from AAC in overall testing, and definitely always wins from wma. This is also widely known on several tests to be found online.
"Compromise on Space - best lossy would be Musepack above 128 Kbps it cannot be beaten"
This is a complete and utter lie. Ogg Vorbis beats Musepack by tens of percentages. Even MP3 wins from musepack in many circumstances, above 128 kbit/s. Musepack is a very old and buggy codec, shows many artifacts and pre-demands for its source-files to give decent results. MPC loses in all tests (from Ogg Vorbis and AAC) that we've done here at the Dutch national broadcast facilities (NOB) in 2007.
In addition it states:
"Portable Player - for iPod go for the newest m4a, others Windows Media Audio,"
which is also nonsense. Even YouTube is going with LAME 3.97 code for its flash videos. Trust me, they've tested that against others. For portable go with lame MP3 or Ogg Vorbis, or if the firmware requires it with m4a/aac, but even at ~96 kbit/s LAME still wins from AAC in overall testing, and definitely always wins from wma. This is also widely known on several tests to be found online.
Comment