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MP3 to MP4

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  • zee
    • Sep 2015
    • 4

    MP3 to MP4

    Hi there...I dont have the codec available under config to go to MP4. HELP!! Please!!
    I'll repost under Batch bc want to use both utilities


    I apologize the thread title should just be 'MP4'
    Last edited by zee; 09-16-2015, 10:44 PM.
  • Spoon
    Administrator
    • Apr 2002
    • 43902

    #2
    Re: Mp4

    M4a has either Apple Lossless as the encoder, or you have to install the m4a AAC encoder from Codec Central (above).
    Spoon
    www.dbpoweramp.com

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    • BrodyBoy
      dBpoweramp Guru
      • Sep 2011
      • 754

      #3
      Re: Mp4

      Originally posted by zee
      Hi there...I dont have the codec available under config to go to MP4. HELP!! Please!!
      I'll repost under Batch bc want to use both utilities


      I apologize the thread title should just be 'MP4'
      It's worth pointing out, zee, that if you're starting with lossy files (mp3s, as implied by your thread title), it's unwise to perform any kind of audio conversion on them. Lossy to lossy, presuming you go from mp3 to AAC, results in low-quality files as more of the audio data is discarded. Lossy to lossless, presuming you go from mp3 to Apple Lossless, does nothing but create a needlessly bloated file....nothing's lost or gained but the file gets a lot bigger.

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      • davidhall
        • Aug 2015
        • 9

        #4
        Re: Mp4

        Originally posted by BrodyBoy
        It's worth pointing out, zee, that if you're starting with lossy files (mp3s, as implied by your thread title), it's unwise to perform any kind of audio conversion on them. Lossy to lossy, presuming you go from mp3 to AAC, results in low-quality files as more of the audio data is discarded. Lossy to lossless, presuming you go from mp3 to Apple Lossless, does nothing but create a needlessly bloated file....nothing's lost or gained but the file gets a lot bigger.
        Cascading lossy compression is best avoided but sometimes if you need to edit or resample or apply some other process there is simply no way around it. The best thing you can do is decode it to PCM, do what you need to do and just leave it as PCM, but there is no guarantee it won't be recompressed further down the chain. The best advice is to start with the best sounding lossless source material you can in the first place. I suspect in the world of TV broadcasting in particular the cascading of lossy video and audio compression is somewhat routine.

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