MP3 and FLAC Audio Formats – We Use It Wisely

MP3 and FLAC Audio Formats – We Use It Wisely

FLAC vs MP3

In this post, I want to talk about how to get the best results when compressing music in FLAC and MP3 formats. In the age of mass distribution of audio and video streaming services, this topic may seem of little relevance, however, as practice shows, this is not the case.

FLAC vs MP3

First, not everyone wants to depend on third-party resources, which can behave as they please at any time, from the introduction of various access restrictions to content to its complete removal. Second, there are many places in the world where the Internet is slow, dreary, and with lunch breaks. Third, the sound quality when listening online is usually quite acceptable for most users, but it can plunge sophisticated listeners with good equipment into depression. Considering all the above, we can assume

Basic concepts

PCM (pulse code modulation), also known as PCM (pulse code modulation) is a method of representing an analog signal in digital form. It works like this: electrical vibrations are fed into the input of a device called the ADC (analog to digital converter), which is an analog audio signal. The ADC measures the level of this signal with a certain frequency and transmits the obtained values ​​to the outside, where they are stored. Thus, a data matrix is ​​formed, which is a sequence of values ​​of the amplitude of the original signal. The process described is called “digitization”. The main problem with storing PCM data in “naked” form is its rather large volume, therefore, for a more rational use of space on the carrier, various digital audio compression algorithms are used.

Encoder (or “encoder” from English “encoder”) is a software designed to convert WAV to any other format in order to reduce the amount of stored data.

Decoder – Software or hardware used to play files compressed in the appropriate format or convert them to uncompressed format.

Lossy is the generic name for a family of audio formats that use lossy data compression. Typical members of the family are MP3, AAC, WMA, Ogg Vorbis. The main characteristic of lossy formats is that when the material is compressed in any of them, a significant part of the original audio information is irretrievably lost and cannot be restored later in any way. Because of this, a high degree of compression is achieved, while the loss is barely perceptible or generally invisible to the ear, as only data that is not critical to human perception is discarded.

Lossless is the generic name for a family of audio formats that use lossless data compression. Typical family members: FLAC, Monkey’s Audio (APE), ALAC, WavPack. Unlike lossy formats, here no information is lost during compression, everything happens in the same way as in normal filing cabinets. Paying for complete data security is significantly lower compression ratio compared to loss.

MP3 (MPEG-1 Layer 3) is historically the first and most widespread lossy compression format. Despite the fact that, due to the era of MP3, today it does not shine with the efficiency of compression, its popularity remains very high due to its versatility: any plate can reproduce this format. At the same time, if a suitable encoder and decoder are used, the MP3 sound quality is at a very decent level. The combination of these two factors justifies the use of the format today. The MP3 compression ratio while maintaining high sound quality is 6 to 9 times. The average bit rate of such an MP3 with 16-bit / 44.1 kHz stereo parameters is 150 to 240 kbps, the file size of a five-minute recording in this form is 6 to 9 MB.

FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is currently the most popular lossless audio compression format. If lossless support is claimed for any software or equipment, this software / equipment can almost certainly play FLAC. The format is the de facto standard among lovers of quality sound. The FLAC compression ratio is 1.3-2.8 times. FLAC bitrate with parameters 16 bit / 44.1 kHz / stereo – 500-1100 kbps, the file size of a five minute recording in this form is 18-40 MB.

All about M4A files. What is M4A?

About M4A Format

M4A is a file extension of an audio file encoded with (advanced audio codingAAC) which is a lossy compression. M4A is generally thought of as the successor of MP3, which was not originally designed for audio only, but was the layer MPEG III or 2 video files. M4A stands for MPEG 4 Audio. The M4A file type is primarily associated with ‘MPEG-4 Audio Layer

m4a

‘.The files in. M4A are actually the audio layer (not video) MPEG 4 movies. M4A is destined to become the new audio file compression standard. This format is also known as Apple Lossless, Apple Lossless Encoder, or ALE. of a new codec designed to provide lossless coding in less storage space.

Both M4A and MP3 file extensions are used for audio-only files. MPEG-only audio 4 container files usually have an M4A file extension. They are unprotected. Protected files usually have an M4P.AAC or M4A file extension. File quality is better and the file size is smaller compared to MP3 files.
Programs that can open M4A files include iTunes, Quicktime, Windows Media Player, and Roxio Popcorn, toast and Creator. Some media players only play the format when renamed MP4.

. Mp4 vs. M4A

M4A means MPEG 4 Audio and is a file extension used to represent audio files.
The existence of two different file extensions. Mp4 and. M4A, to name only MP4 audio files has been a source of confusion between users and multimedia playback software. Some file managers, such as Windows Explorer, look for the type of media and associated applications of a file based on its extension But since MPEG-4 Part 14 is a container format, MPEG-4 files can contain any number of audio, video, and even subtitle streams, so it is impossible to determine the type of streams in an MPEG-4 file depending on of its file extension alone. In response, Apple Inc. began using and popularizing the. File extension m4a, which is used for MP4 containers with audio data in Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) or its own Apple Lossless (ALE, ALAC) format. Software capable of audio / video playback must recognize files with the extension. M4a or file extensions. Mp4, as expected, since there are no file format differences between the two. Most software capable of creating MPEG-4 audio allows the user to choose the file name extension of the created MPEG-4 files.

whats m4a

All about M4A files

The M4A (MPEG-4 Audio) file extension is used for compressed audio files, which were created in the MP4 or MPEG-4 container format. However, unlike these formats, M4A files only contain audio data. Depending on Apple’s QuickTime file format, these documents are often associated with Apple products, such as the iPod or iTunes multimedia software.

A higher compression rate allows smaller file sizes than the usual MP3 standard. At the same time, better reproduction quality is achieved. Files in the relatively new M4A format can be opened with many external media players, except iPod or iTunes. Depending on the operating system used, such as the current Windows Media Player, the latest versions of Winamp Media Player or Apple QuickTime Player to call.

All converters to or from M4A

MP3 to M4A
M4A to MP3
M4A to OGG
M4A to WMA
M4A to WAV
M4A to AAC
M4A to FLAC
OGG to M4A
WMA to M4A
WAV to M4A
AAC to M4A
FLAC to M4A
MP4 to M4A
AVI to M4A
3GPP to M4A
MOV to M4A
OPUS to M4A
AMR to M4A
MKV to M4A
WEBM to M4A
FLV to M4A
WMV to M4A
MPG to M4A
M4A to MP4
AIFF to M4A
MID to M4A
MP2 to M4A
OGV to M4A
GMO to M4A
OGA to M4A
OGX to M4A
M4P to M4A
MXF to M4A
MPEG to M4A
VOB to M4A
TS to M4A
M4V to M4A
ASF to M4A
M2V to M4A
RMVB to M4A
QT to M4A