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I have been extracting my CDs on to my computer using the EZ-CD extractor at a 128 bit rate. Now I am only using this to play through my cheap little system in my garage through my computer but I am wondering if I am missing a lot of quality extracting at that rate versus my choices of 128, 160,192,224,256,320,near CD-quality and CD quality.I do not know why I chose this rate, my friend set the program up and set it to that rate and I dont remember his reasoning. It seems to be fine for my garage system so maybe that is all that matters. I am sure it had something to do with the amount of songs. Isn't it true I can get more songs at a lower bit rate?
The reality is that a little bit over 128 kbps (using lame as a encoder) and almost nobody is able to distinguish between CD and a MP3 in a double blind test. If you feel insecure you can go all the way up to 320 kbps. For more reliable information about MP3's go to those web sites:http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/http://www.mp3-tech.org/http://www.soundexpert.info/
Quote from: LightFire on 17 Oct 2006, 02:08 amThe reality is that a little bit over 128 kbps (using lame as a encoder) and almost nobody is able to distinguish between CD and a MP3 in a double blind test. If you feel insecure you can go all the way up to 320 kbps. For more reliable information about MP3's go to those web sites:http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/http://www.mp3-tech.org/http://www.soundexpert.info/You, like all the other compression fans, fail to see the point. Drive space is cheap. Generation loss is real. Why waste time archiving in less than lossless quality?
Well. In my case compatibility plays a role. It is important to me to be able to play mp3 CDs in my car. So I don't need to replace CDs in long trips. One mp3 CD at 320 kbps still can hold more than 5 hours of music. And once I have those CDs burned to use in the car I would like to play them (or the songs) in the other equipment too: portable player and sound system. It is very hard to find players that support the lossless codecs. And the fact of being lossless is irrelevant for listening purpose if someone (99.999% of all people) can't differentiate the quality levels anyways.