Hello,
Was just wandering which of the two formats you like.
Personally I have the feeling Ogg is better at highest quality than FLAC. And if I transcode from Ogg to FLAC, the file is larger than the directly ripped and transcoded to FLAC file. And the kbps is higher in FLAC if transcoded from Ogg. Vice-versa, the Ogg file is identical if ripped and transcoded directly to Ogg, or transcoded from FLAC to Ogg. I also have to say that Ogg, being a Linux format, I give it more credit from the start.
Edited: It is curious, but the directly ripped and transcoded Ogg file is smaller than the directly ripped and transcoded FLAC, and the kbps is smaller too. But the smaller Ogg file is able to produce a larger and better (higher kbps) FLAC file. Should I understand that Ogg packs more information and in better way compared to FLAC? This would be the logical conclusion.
I also like to listen to these files in Audacious, because it allows to set the bit depth. And Ogg seems to sound better in 32 bits, while FLAC in floating point.
I made these tests with classical music files, both instrumental and vocal, ripped from my CDs. They seem to better allow to feel the deepness of the sound (harmonics). Edited: I used a HiFi headset directly connected to the computer, with no equalizer enabled. So, these (above) were my conclusions.
What are yours? Why would you chose a format over the other, when setting your long term (home) digital music library?
Thanks,
Was just wandering which of the two formats you like.
Personally I have the feeling Ogg is better at highest quality than FLAC. And if I transcode from Ogg to FLAC, the file is larger than the directly ripped and transcoded to FLAC file. And the kbps is higher in FLAC if transcoded from Ogg. Vice-versa, the Ogg file is identical if ripped and transcoded directly to Ogg, or transcoded from FLAC to Ogg. I also have to say that Ogg, being a Linux format, I give it more credit from the start.
Edited: It is curious, but the directly ripped and transcoded Ogg file is smaller than the directly ripped and transcoded FLAC, and the kbps is smaller too. But the smaller Ogg file is able to produce a larger and better (higher kbps) FLAC file. Should I understand that Ogg packs more information and in better way compared to FLAC? This would be the logical conclusion.
I also like to listen to these files in Audacious, because it allows to set the bit depth. And Ogg seems to sound better in 32 bits, while FLAC in floating point.
I made these tests with classical music files, both instrumental and vocal, ripped from my CDs. They seem to better allow to feel the deepness of the sound (harmonics). Edited: I used a HiFi headset directly connected to the computer, with no equalizer enabled. So, these (above) were my conclusions.
What are yours? Why would you chose a format over the other, when setting your long term (home) digital music library?
Thanks,
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