I know that dbpoweramp has a command line codec to add any command line encoder, but the quicktime pro true vbr aac encoder does not have a windows command line interface (and it's not available as an option from itunes either, at least not yet). So this is a feature request. Thanks.
(It might be relatively easy to do using the quicktime sdk and a script file, if it has a COM interface--or it might not.)
These results show (using a slightly older qt) that quicktime true vbr aac might now be the best aac by a significant margin (at about the same bitrate as nero, scoring 4.7 versus 4.0). The thread also shows how clunky it is to get quicktime to produce a true vbr file--a two step process involving conversion to quicktime movie and then passthrough conversion to m4a/mp4 audio:
Related thread:
Explanation of the "two-step export" process to create the audio file (steps are almost identical in quicktime pro for windows, except note that the simple "afconvert" commandline method is not available):
Note also that the two-step process strips/loses the tags from the original source file, even if the source file is Apple lossless.
(It might be relatively easy to do using the quicktime sdk and a script file, if it has a COM interface--or it might not.)
These results show (using a slightly older qt) that quicktime true vbr aac might now be the best aac by a significant margin (at about the same bitrate as nero, scoring 4.7 versus 4.0). The thread also shows how clunky it is to get quicktime to produce a true vbr file--a two step process involving conversion to quicktime movie and then passthrough conversion to m4a/mp4 audio:
Related thread:
Explanation of the "two-step export" process to create the audio file (steps are almost identical in quicktime pro for windows, except note that the simple "afconvert" commandline method is not available):
Note also that the two-step process strips/loses the tags from the original source file, even if the source file is Apple lossless.
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