I have a $100 iTunes card.
I have a $100 iTunes card. Posted on: 17.07.2012 by Madelene Witek Came with my macbook. What is something useful I could get with this?Not music, cause it's not even 320. Lemur looks nice, but it's $50 and I dunno how useful that would be on just the iPhone I have, probably going to buy TouchOSC though just for a couple cues/samples on iPhone. Pickings seem pretty slim, better off just selling it for like $90? Enlighten me. | |
Sylvia Greener 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by djproben
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Alena Horten 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by Sn0wday
Here you go
AAC files are generally higher quality and slightly smaller than MP3 files of the same song. The reasons for this are fairly technical (more about the specifications of the AAC format can be found at Wikipedia), but the overview of the reasoning is that AAC was created after MP3 and it offers a more efficient compression scheme, with less quality loss, than MP3s. Despite popular belief, AAC was not created by Apple and is not proprietary to Apple or its devices. AAC can be used with a wide variety of non-Apple devices.
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Nita Eviston 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by Sn0wday
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Madelene Witek 17.07.2012 | Came with my macbook. What is something useful I could get with this? Not music, cause it's not even 320. Lemur looks nice, but it's $50 and I dunno how useful that would be on just the iPhone I have, probably going to buy TouchOSC though just for a couple cues/samples on iPhone. Pickings seem pretty slim, better off just selling it for like $90? Enlighten me. |
Wilson Durrum 18.07.2012 | Wow I didnt even know that 256 AAC and 320 mp3 were similar. I know that I cannot really tell the differences when listening to them through my headphones or home stereo but I was not sure if it would matter with a bigger system like in a club. Thank you all for the info. Saves me a lot of money buying on iTunes vs Beatport for the same tracks. |
Francis Leckliter 18.07.2012 | Kbps isn't the be all end all to quality. A lot of other factors will determine the overall quality, the mix, the sample/synth quality pre-master, etc. Anyone of us could export a piece of technical crap in 900 kbps... |
Sylvia Greener 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by djproben
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Virginia Flaagan 18.07.2012 | i cannot see how there would be an audible difference in aac and 320. that being said, sell it for 90 and buy an x1. |
Janyce Henningson 18.07.2012 | It's my birthday today, send it to me And most AAC from iTunes are fine btw |
Danae Dumler 18.07.2012 | The AAC is probably technically better (even though the number is smaller), but in practice you probably would have to work really hard to even hear a difference. Far more important is whether your DJ and database software handles AAC as well as it handles mp3. |
Alena Horten 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by Sn0wday
Here you go
AAC files are generally higher quality and slightly smaller than MP3 files of the same song. The reasons for this are fairly technical (more about the specifications of the AAC format can be found at Wikipedia), but the overview of the reasoning is that AAC was created after MP3 and it offers a more efficient compression scheme, with less quality loss, than MP3s. Despite popular belief, AAC was not created by Apple and is not proprietary to Apple or its devices. AAC can be used with a wide variety of non-Apple devices.
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Madelene Witek 18.07.2012 | You're saying there is NO difference? |
Nita Eviston 18.07.2012 |
Originally Posted by Sn0wday
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Madelene Witek 18.07.2012 | Ehhhhh, I just believe when paying for music I'd like it to all be in 320.. at least. So nothing else in iTunes worthwhile? I might just sell this and put the money towards an X1 |
Margie Pavell 17.07.2012 | buying your music from itunes is okay unless you play on a funktion one sound system or are mostapha... |
Ulysses Vittetoe 17.07.2012 | Isn't 256 aac pretty much the same quality as 320 mp3? You should be okay buying from iTunes as far as quality goes, if that's what you really want. |
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