alocispepraluger102 Posted October 8, 2012 Report Posted October 8, 2012 (edited) NEIL YOUNG HAS INVENTED A NEW, BETTER SOUNDING KIND OF MP3, AND HOPES TO BRING IT TO MARKET. LINK Edited October 8, 2012 by alocispepraluger102 Quote
Dave James Posted October 8, 2012 Report Posted October 8, 2012 The NYT Sunday Magazine had an article about Young a couple of weeks ago that included a discussion of his audio development work. What you have to worry about is that he's sinking a lot of time and money into a medium that's probably not going to have much broad based appeal. There can't be more than a handful of younger people out there who give a rat's ass about sound other than that they have access to it. iPods, for all their convenience, have pretty much put quality reproduction on the back burner. Kudos to Young for fighting the good fight and caring enough to do it. I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted October 8, 2012 Author Report Posted October 8, 2012 The NYT Sunday Magazine had an article about Young a couple of weeks ago that included a discussion of his audio development work. What you have to worry about is that he's sinking a lot of time and money into a medium that's probably not going to have much broad based appeal. There can't be more than a handful of younger people out there who give a rat's ass about sound other than that they have access to it. iPods, for all their convenience, have pretty much put quality reproduction on the back burner. Kudos to Young for fighting the good fight and caring enough to do it. I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. you are right. a young nurse, running on the treadmill beside me today, seeing my inexpensive but decent sounding koss portapros, mentioned how much she hated earbuds, how they hurt her ears, how they were always falling out, and how crappy they sounded, but she said they were 'the fashion.' Quote
paul secor Posted October 9, 2012 Report Posted October 9, 2012 The NYT Sunday Magazine had an article about Young a couple of weeks ago that included a discussion of his audio development work. What you have to worry about is that he's sinking a lot of time and money into a medium that's probably not going to have much broad based appeal. There can't be more than a handful of younger people out there who give a rat's ass about sound other than that they have access to it. iPods, for all their convenience, have pretty much put quality reproduction on the back burner. Kudos to Young for fighting the good fight and caring enough to do it. I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. you are right. a young nurse, running on the treadmill beside me today, seeing my inexpensive but decent sounding koss portapros, mentioned how much she hated earbuds, how they hurt her ears, how they were always falling out, and how crappy they sounded, but she said they were 'the fashion.' Sad commentary on the state of music/sound quality in our society. Quote
Daniel A Posted October 9, 2012 Report Posted October 9, 2012 (edited) I hope Young has co-workers in this project, because his statements on MP3:s (see earlier thread here) reveals a lack of understanding of the technology behind compressed audio. For a majority of people MP3:s above a certain bitrate cannot be distinguished from the uncompressed original. Those interested can visit hydrogenaudio.org and read up on listening tests. I consider myself concerned with audio quality and I've done blind tests (there's software that enables you to do so called "ABX" tests on your own) that have revealed the bitrate where I can't tell the difference anymore. I enjoy my LP collection, I still listen to CD:s when I'm in my living room, but MP3:s are a very convenient way of bringing the music with me in the car, on my mobile phone, when on vacation etc. Surely they sound better than the majority of compact cassetes everybody were happy with for a couple of decades. That said, I'll welcome the possibility of downloading high-resolution digital files, but it is an incorrect assumption that those listening to MP3s do not care about sound quality at all. Many do, and many MP3:s do sound quite OK. Edited October 9, 2012 by Daniel A Quote
RDK Posted October 9, 2012 Report Posted October 9, 2012 Shhh.... don't anyone tell him about FLAC. This should be fun. Quote
Daniel A Posted October 9, 2012 Report Posted October 9, 2012 Shhh.... don't anyone tell him about FLAC. This should be fun. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted October 9, 2012 Report Posted October 9, 2012 (edited) I hope Young has co-workers in this project, because his statements on MP3:s (see earlier thread here) reveals a lack of understanding of the technology behind compressed audio. For a majority of people MP3:s above a certain bitrate cannot be distinguished from the uncompressed original. Those interested can visit hydrogenaudio.org and read up on listening tests. I consider myself concerned with audio quality and I've done blind tests (there's software that enables you to do so called "ABX" tests on your own) that have revealed the bitrate where I can't tell the difference anymore. I enjoy my LP collection, I still listen to CD:s when I'm in my living room, but MP3:s are a very convenient way of bringing the music with me in the car, on my mobile phone, when on vacation etc. Surely they sound better than the majority of compact cassetes everybody were happy with for a couple of decades. That said, I'll welcome the possibility of downloading high-resolution digital files, but it is an incorrect assumption that those listening to MP3s do not care about sound quality at all. Many do, and many MP3:s do sound quite OK. Absolutely. The error behind Young's thinking is believing that most people want the best possible sound. There's only a minority who want that. Most people want good quality sound (which you can get from MP3) and that will do. For a new technology to take off it has to do something substantially different from existing technology (as LP did over 78 or CD over LP). The story of SACD illustrates that point perfectly. Loved by a minority, ignored by everyone else. It strikes me that developments in streaming audio are where the next big thing will happen. Though it may not affect those of us used to something more permanent quite as much. Edited October 10, 2012 by A Lark Ascending Quote
fasstrack Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 . What you have to worry about is that he's sinking a lot of time and money into a medium that's probably not going to have much broad based appeal. There can't be more than a handful of younger people out there who give a rat's ass about sound other than that they have access to it. iPods, for all their convenience, have pretty much put quality reproduction on the back burner. Kudos to Young for fighting the good fight and caring enough to do it. I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. Whatever became of mini discs-speaking of doomed technologies? I bit when they first came out. The sound was flat as hell, but you could store a lot of music in a small space. If you set it on mono you got 2x the time-good for interviews or recording one's gigs. I recorded countless hours of music-then lost the whole collection. Then the machine itself broke-past warranty, of course-and c'est le fin. I thought they were pretty cool though. Quote
JSngry Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 It strikes me that developments in streaming audio are where the next big thing will happen. It's the logical next step after FM radio. Quote
JohnJ Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 . What you have to worry about is that he's sinking a lot of time and money into a medium that's probably not going to have much broad based appeal. There can't be more than a handful of younger people out there who give a rat's ass about sound other than that they have access to it. iPods, for all their convenience, have pretty much put quality reproduction on the back burner. Kudos to Young for fighting the good fight and caring enough to do it. I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. Whatever became of mini discs-speaking of doomed technologies? I bit when they first came out. The sound was flat as hell, but you could store a lot of music in a small space. If you set it on mono you got 2x the time-good for interviews or recording one's gigs. I recorded countless hours of music-then lost the whole collection. Then the machine itself broke-past warranty, of course-and c'est le fin. I thought they were pretty cool though. Just read this the other day. http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2012/sep/24/sony-minidisc-20-years?INTCMP=SRCH Quote
rostasi Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 (edited) It's kind of like engineering a better broccoli...for those of us who like broccoli. I still have minidiscs (and players - portable and stand-alone units) literally all around me at the moment, but they're being used for transferring away from them to the new tech that's available. The minidisc player was the best portable way for me to use binaural mics for recording. A problem: you needed to keep the player as steady as possible, so that there wouldn't be that annoying whirring sound that happened when it became unbalanced - pretty much ruining your recording. You do the best that you can with what you can afford at the time, I suppose. The next jump was to the iAudio...and then to the Edirol for capturing. Edited October 10, 2012 by rostasi Quote
mjazzg Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 I just hope he's not flogging a dead horse. Crazy Quote
JSngry Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 Edirol That's the ADD medicine, right? Quote
JSngry Posted October 10, 2012 Report Posted October 10, 2012 That was no lady, that was my wife. Quote
Daniel A Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 Shhh.... don't anyone tell him about FLAC. This should be fun. In just a few days, Neil has managed to raise two and a half million dollars on Kickstarter. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1003614822/ponomusic-where-your-soul-rediscovers-music The good news: it's actually just a FLAC player! But then, what's really the point? Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 For a majority of people MP3:s above a certain bitrate cannot be distinguished from the uncompressed original. Those interested can visit hydrogenaudio.org and read up on listening tests. I consider myself concerned with audio quality and I've done blind tests (there's software that enables you to do so called "ABX" tests on your own) that have revealed the bitrate where I can't tell the difference anymore. What was your cutoff point, Daniel? Mine is somewhere around 256kbps. At least when it comes to VBR AAC files. Once I get there, I hear zero difference between the file and the original cd. And I've tried like hell to convince myself that I do! Quote
Jerry_L Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 I usually rip at 192, but I've not yet done a listening comparison. Quote
Ted O'Reilly Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 Looks like a Toblerone candy bar. Not exactly pocketable, is it? Quote
Daniel A Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 (edited) What was your cutoff point, Daniel? Mine is somewhere around 256kbps. At least when it comes to VBR AAC files. Once I get there, I hear zero difference between the file and the original cd. And I've tried like hell to convince myself that I do! For MP3:s made with the LAME encoder, it was at a VBR setting resulting in an average of around 256 kbps. Of course, there may theoretically still be problem samples where I would have been able to tell the difference, but for the purpose of MP3:s, it's really good enough. Edited March 13, 2014 by Daniel A Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 I usually rip at 192, but I've not yet done a listening comparison. You should, and post your results. I can tell a difference at 160kbps, but haven't tried 192 yet. Who knows, that may be my threshold. Daniel, did you hear a difference at 192? Oh, and to be clear, I'm using AAC and not MP3. Though, I do still have some MP3 files I've purchased from Emusic, and recently downloaded a 256 AAC copy to compare. I heard no difference between the two formats at comparable bit rates. Quote
Daniel A Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 (edited) I usually rip at 192, but I've not yet done a listening comparison.You should, and post your results. I can tell a difference at 160kbps, but haven't tried 192 yet. Who knows, that may be my threshold. Daniel, did you hear a difference at 192? It was a few years back, so I actually can't remember. I really should do it again, because the compression algorithms have been fine-tuned since then. Since becoming a father (for the second time last year) I've hardly had time to make any MP3s. Spotify has also replaced much of my to-go listening. Edited March 13, 2014 by Daniel A Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 13, 2014 Report Posted March 13, 2014 Yeah, the technology has really matured exponentially just in the last few years. I find it rather amazing these days. Quote
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