All Things MP3

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An MP3 file is a compressed audio file, which uses lossy compression make it possible to store many files with limited occupied space. Compression of 1/10th is typically achieved at minimal loss in quality, to the point where most people cannot tell the difference between an uncompressed wav file taken from a CD and a properly compressed mp3.

 

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Note: This section possibly contains some elements of opinion or may have a bias because it does not reflect a neutral point of view. Although the information is factual, there's also additional comments that reflect personal opinion. Once denoted the article may remain because of the validity of the opinion and valuable information included.

The quality and size of mp3 files obtained online can vary radically depending on the encoder used, the intent of the encoder, and the skill of the individual doing the encoding. Some mp3 audio files are crisp, clean, and sound excellent. Some mp3 files are digital distortion garbage.

The use of lossy compression is designed to greatly reduce the amount of data required to represent the audio recording and still sound like a faithful reproduction of the original uncompressed audio for most listeners. The compression works by reducing accuracy of certain parts of sound that are considered to be beyond the auditory resolution ability of most people.

MP3 was designed by the Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) as part of its MPEG-1 standard and later extended in the MPEG-2 standard. The first mp3 software became public in 1994 and was called l3enc. Winamp, the most widely known mp3 player for the Microsoft Windows operating system became available to the public in 1997. The underground music trade kicked off in the late 1990s and still thrives today.

Hardware mp3 players became popular. The Rio Volt model was released in the United States around 2001 and was a popular mp3 player.

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The RioVolt SP150 was an mp3 player that played MP3 and WMA CD's, CD-R, CD-RW and CD's. 16 minute skip protection. Up to 20 hours of playtime on 2 AA batteries. Repeat and shuffle play modes. Easy navigation on lighted, 3-line text display.

The evil RIAA sued the maker of the Rio and many other hardware mp3 manufacturers which inhibited their expansion on the market. Later as Apple become dominate with their iPod line of products, the competitors such as Rio died off. Today the market consists mostly of overpriced DRM embedded Apple devices and cheap Chinese made knockoffs. I recommend the cheap Chinese made Knockoffs.

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Mp3 Players

Most people know Winamp. There are 1000s of software mp3 players. This topic will not be explored in depth here. Winamp licensing changed to where it became unacceptable and spyware. Old versions of Winamp are preferred. I use Winamp508lite.

Windows Media Player will play mp3 files if you like bloatware that spies on you. I wouldn't use it.

VLC media player will play mp3 files just fine. It is more for videos. I like it more than any other video player available, however it is not my favorite software for mp3 playback.

XMMS2 is like VLC and the same can be said.

Audacious is a great winamp clone for Linux.

Mpxplay is a DOS console MP3,OGG,WAV,AAC,FLAC, WMA, MPC,AC3 player with integrated file browser, spectrum analyser and other features.

just to name a few.

Normalization

When you listen to mp3 audio music from a playlist you may notice how some songs are more quiet than others. The encoder may have set the input gain too low. On the other hand, some audio files are extremely loud. This is the result of an input gain too high. The same song from two different sources may have entirely different loudness levels. Normalization is the process of analyzing music files and adjusting the gain so that all play at relatively the same loudness. Normalization works great on files with too low of a gain. However, files with excessive gain may be distorted. Distortion occurs if the encoder set the input gain too high past the point of distortion. Such distorted mp3 audio files should be deleted as there is no remedy to recover the audio quality. Distortion blows speakers, not volume!

MP3Gain

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MP3Gain is a program that will nalyzes and adjusts mp3 files so that they have the same volume.

MP3Gain is a small software that automatically adjusts your mp3s so that they all have the same volume. What makes it different from the other normalization software is that it does not just do peak normalization (the process of making all tracks equally loud). Instead, it scans your music files and perform a statistical analysis to determine how loud the file actually sounds to the human ear. Best of all, the changes in the volume does not alter the quality of your mp3, that means you can listen to all your high-quality music at the volume suitable for your ear.

MP3 Tag Editor

MP3 audio files have header information that is readable by MP3 players. This header information includes Name of Song and Artist along with other details and meta data.

Since people create their own mp3 files and trade them on the net, these tags often contain erroneous data. This is because some people don't care, and other people are stupid. Sometimes the tag metadata is simply absent.

mp3tag

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Mp3tag is a powerful and easy-to-use tool to edit metadata of audio files.

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This is really good software and completely free. The author accepts donations.

MP3 Playlist Editor

pls - PLS is a computer file format that stores multimedia playlists, originally used by SHOUTcast and Icecast for streaming media over the Internet. PLS is a more expressive playlist format than basic M3U, as it can store (cache) information on the song title and length (this is supported in extended M3U only).

The pls format stores the audio file and sometimes the path only. It is pretty simple.

m3u - M3U is a computer file format that contains multimedia playlists. It originally was designed for audio files, such as MP3, but various software now uses it to play video file lists. M3Us can also point a media player to an online streaming audio source.

The m3u format stores the file, path, and some extended information. If all you want is a basic playlist then the extended information is nothing but file overhead and you should use pls format.

Playlist Creator 3.6

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oddgravity Playlist Creator - Playlist Creator is a simple single purpose tool that enables you to create playlists of your music files. You don't have to recreate your playlist every time you want to make changes to it. Just open the existing playlist file, make the changes you want and save the playlist. Combining several playlists into a single big playlist is quite simple as well: Insert as many existing playlist files to your current playlist as you like and save the playlist.

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The author accepts donations via Paypal and Bitcoin.

MP3 Encoder

An MP3 encoder is the software using an MP3 Codec. Not to confuse other software with an actual encoder, however, I would like to mention an old favorite. Cool Edit Pro 2.0 can save audio files as mp3. It can convert wave to mp3. It is an editor that uses an external encoder to create an mp3 file.

The LAME encoder is the most widely used mp3 encoder over the years. LAME is considered the best MP3 encoder at mid-high bitrates and at VBR by many today. Ironically, LAME originally stood for LAME Ain't an Mp3 Encoder. What LAME actually is involves a completely open source encoding engine that other developers incorporate into their software. An example is out_lame which is a Winamp output plug-in to create MP3 files directly from Winamp.

The LAME developers have to release it in source code only and they have to call it an "educational purposes only" tool so that they don't get their pants sued off by the evil RIAA and greedy industry maggots. However, that didn't stop Sony company from using LAME in their DRM Rootkit in violation of the LGPL license.

Software today, by and large uses only about 4 main encoding engines due largely in part by the patents held by sleazeballs. Although no one company owns exclusive rights, MP3 software companies are supposed pay a licensing fee to develop their own encoder.

Ogg Vorbis

This is something superior to MP3 in that it is open source, ogg files sound better, and the compression is more advanced. However, ogg doesn't seem to catch on.

Mp3 encoding tends to limit headroom. The process generates what are called Inter Sample Peaks which results in distortion. Some of the audio discarded in the encoding process limits the total range of the sample. The subtle tones and pitches that make some music ever so delicate is completely lost during encoding. It is said that up to 90% of this type of audio can be lost during encoding at a constant 128kbps.

The quality lost is sometimes described as depth, richness and three-dimensionality. These are, of course, completely intangible things that are metaphoric at best. Whether the average Joe can detect the difference is yet to be proven. Certain people will notice, but the masses will not. So can mp3 be considered good enough? Depends on who you ask.