Hello there:
It's been a long time since I was last here, but when nothing is out of the ordinary I need no help.....until now.....
I have a question on how the getpopupinfo exe reads a wav file,
recently I have begun to collect hi res audio albums, these are all in 24bit & the majority are 96khz sampling rate.
any 16bit/44khz wav file is read by *popupinfo* as being 100% & uncompressed (1to1),
here's where the oddity begins..........any wav file that is 48khz or 96khz is read as being 150% in size & .6 to 1 compression.
Why is this happening? why can't dbpoweramp read any of these files as being 100% in size?
This is having a negative effect on the encoded to mp3 file that I create insomuch as the file being compressed to 320 constant or variable is being compressed at 7 to 1 down to the same size that a smaller 44khz file would be compressed to at 4 to 1. If I take two files of the same piece of music, one being 44khz & the second a 48khz file both will compress to the smaller 44khz size. I'm assuming that the 48 khz file is seeing more information being tossed to compress it.
I don't understand where the file is being misread by poweramp causing the incorrect compression size.
here's a screenshot of what I am referring to.....
It's been a long time since I was last here, but when nothing is out of the ordinary I need no help.....until now.....
I have a question on how the getpopupinfo exe reads a wav file,
recently I have begun to collect hi res audio albums, these are all in 24bit & the majority are 96khz sampling rate.
any 16bit/44khz wav file is read by *popupinfo* as being 100% & uncompressed (1to1),
here's where the oddity begins..........any wav file that is 48khz or 96khz is read as being 150% in size & .6 to 1 compression.
Why is this happening? why can't dbpoweramp read any of these files as being 100% in size?
This is having a negative effect on the encoded to mp3 file that I create insomuch as the file being compressed to 320 constant or variable is being compressed at 7 to 1 down to the same size that a smaller 44khz file would be compressed to at 4 to 1. If I take two files of the same piece of music, one being 44khz & the second a 48khz file both will compress to the smaller 44khz size. I'm assuming that the 48 khz file is seeing more information being tossed to compress it.
I don't understand where the file is being misread by poweramp causing the incorrect compression size.
here's a screenshot of what I am referring to.....
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