Monday, May 19, 2014

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It s been quite a long time since I ve needed to rip a CD using iTunes, and the first time I did it the other day, I wasn t impressed with the quality of the sound. I forgot to change the quality of the imported songs which you can easily aphis form 7001 do with iTunes.
Then on the next screen select the quality I always make mine 320kbps, which will create larger MP3 files but they will be at good quality. Usually I prefer to rip them to FLAC and play them with Foobar2000 . But the FLAC file format isn t supported in iTunes, and I was ripping this CD for a friend.
Then when you click to Import CD, you ll see the settings you changed aphis form 7001 under the Details field. Click OK. If you want to use different settings for some reason, iTunes allows you to do that any time you click the Import CD button.
The default location on Windows is in your Music folder under iTunes Media. That s unless you ve changed the iTunes library location . Now you can zip them up and add to Dropbox or stick the songs on a device or add to a music player. In my case I added them to Xbox Music which analyzes your Music folder by default anyway.
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I can t agree regarding your AAC vs MP3 statements At equal bitrates aphis form 7001 I ll take an AAC over MP3 any day. From what I can tell MP3 attacks the high end alot worse than AAC, to the point where a 128Kbps AAC sounds roughly equivlent to a 192Kbps MP3.
Over the years I guess I always used MP3 mainly for compatibility reasons mainly. Even though AAC is probably better quality….. I guess I’ve just been lazy to find out how that would impact my overall workflow of playing music around my house.
Yup. AAC has repeatedly been reviewed as generally superior and recording at 320 kbps ensures great resolution for a compressed format. It is compatible everywhere the MP3 format is and is more space efficient to boot. For passive listening, the vast majority of folks will be happy at 256 kbps, but if you are truly “tuned in” the tradeoff of space to quality is worth it in my experience.
Thanks for the tip. I don’t touch Apple media devices for audio playback, but I do use iTunes to rip my CD’s to WAV. I recently picked up my cheap, chunky, poorly designed, crappily interfaced; but staggeringly fantastic sounding Colorfly C3 (especially when paired with my Sennheiser ie 80′s) I have never heard better sound at that price point
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