Quote:
Originally Posted by Hanna Sniper
There’s no such thing as a high quality mp3.
mp3 are lossy files, whatever you do don’t ever share or burn these onto a disk. If you are using it for your own personal use (mp3 players) but never put them to disk as you’re only adding the to degrading of music quality. If you’re burning to a disk always go with lossless files such as SHN and FLAC.
I can’t believe there are now sites that charge people for mp3’s that can never again be returned to its original quality.
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Why do you think people convert mp3s to various different formats once they are mp3s? That really is the beauty of mp3s is that they can be played virtually anywhere. Why even bother with digital music if you are not going to keep them in a format that can be played other places than off a computer?
Who wants to spend the time saving 5000 songs in one format for one purpose and another for another purpose.
Who talked about burning mp3 to audio cds? Don't really know why anyone would do that. burning mp3s to mp3 cds is very useful.
I am pretty picky about my music quality, and have very accurate home speakers, and I can't tell the difference between a 192 lame encoded mp3 vs. CD. I challenge anyone to. I've read audiophile magazines where they can't find anyone who can tell a difference.
Why would anyone pay for mp3s, you ask? Why would anyone pay for copy protected CDs? Why would anyone pay for drm'd digital music? allofmp3 offers a great service where they store all their music at 320 kbs and let you encode using lame to whichever bitrate you like. Definitely worth the nominal charge they charge.
sure at some level of re-encoding quality would suffer, buy who does that?