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I have read many posts about people prefering EAC/FLAC over iTunes or vice versa. Interesting thing is I have never read about anyone doing a comparison between the two.
Why bother to convert WAV to FLAC? Hard drive space is cheap and the conversion needlessly introduces another step with possible degradation of SQ.
I'm a little late to the game on this topic, but I just wanted to throw in my .02. I have found the Apple Lossless to be a very easy and very high quality format. I don't have a very revealing system, but I remember finding a link online to a guy using Logic (I believe) to compare the actual wavelengths of different file types and he found Lossless to be just that...a losslessly compressed version with exactly the same audio properties. No comparison to FLAC though, so I can't comment.
I agree with you. However, I don't think the argument is over the quality of Apple Lossless. I think the argument is whether a CD ripped with Apple Lossless is as good or better than EAC/FLAC. My point is that IMHO and experience, the two click iTunes method is as good or better than EAC which I find overly cumbersome to use.
Quote from: rajacatWhy bother to convert WAV to FLAC? Hard drive space is cheap and the conversion needlessly introduces another step with possible degradation of SQ.No doubt hard drive space is cheap. I do it because of the tags....I'm pretty sure you can't tag WAVs.-Jim
Quote from: HorizonsI agree with you. However, I don't think the argument is over the quality of Apple Lossless. I think the argument is whether a CD ripped with Apple Lossless is as good or better than EAC/FLAC. My point is that IMHO and experience, the two click iTunes method is as good or better than EAC which I find overly cumbersome to use.How does the quality of Apple Lossless vs. WAV/FLAC compare, and how does the amount of space the two take up compare?
Quote from: JDUBSQuote from: rajacatWhy bother to convert WAV to FLAC? Hard drive space is cheap and the conversion needlessly introduces another step with possible degradation of SQ.No doubt hard drive space is cheap. I do it because of the tags....I'm pretty sure you can't tag WAVs.-JimYes, you can tag WAV'S from within EAC. Open EAC, click on DATABASE, click Get CD information from and click Remote freedb.
if your cds are in decent quality shape (few scratches) then you will be hard pressed to find ANY difference between EAC and itunes when importing in lossless format. just be sure to check off error correction.itunes is easier, faster and will achieve virtually the same level of quality. unless you have run your cds through a sandbox you wont be able to tell the difference.