I stumbled onto this little thing called FLAC
- CaTaClYsM
- Joined: Fri Jul 26, 2002 3:54 am
I stumbled onto this little thing called FLAC
http://flac.sourceforge.net/
And I had a few questions about it.
Is it truly lossless?
How much, on average, does it chizzle off the file?
Can it be crammed into a video file?
If so, how?
And I had a few questions about it.
Is it truly lossless?
How much, on average, does it chizzle off the file?
Can it be crammed into a video file?
If so, how?
So in other words, one part of the community is waging war on another part of the community because they take their community seriously enough to want to do so. Then they tell the powerless side to get over the loss cause it's just an online community. I'm glad people make so much sense." -- Tab
- madmallard
- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2001 6:07 pm
- Status: Cracked up quacker, quacked up cracker
- Location: Atlanta, GA
- Contact:
Why not try it and find out?
There are a few other lossless audio compression methods including APE.
wether or not you can use them in a video is unlikely.
There are a few other lossless audio compression methods including APE.
wether or not you can use them in a video is unlikely.
Main Events Director Anime Weekend Atlanta, Kawaii-kon
- Tab.
- Joined: Tue May 13, 2003 10:36 pm
- Status: SLP
- Location: gayville
Re: I stumbled onto this little thing called FLAC
No. The name is Free Lossless Audio Codec to trick you. It's a conspiracy to give you bad quality audio masterminded by the RIAA.CaTaClYsM wrote:Is it truly lossless?
Herro.CaTaClYsM wrote:How much, on average, does it chizzle off the file?
More info and comparisons here.
My own results on TBM's Violet CD:
Code: Select all
fmt size(mb) size(byte) % PCM extended fmt
LA 191 200,335,363 61.63 Lossless-Audio
OFR 191 201,232,895 61.91 OptimFrog
APE 192 202,138,104 62.18 Monkey's Audio
WP 197 207,398,538 63.80 WavPack
WMA 198 207,877,349 63.95 Windows Media Audio 9 Lossless
WMA 198 207,913,831 63.95 Windows Media Audio 9.1 Lossless
LPAC 198 208,074,925 64.01 Lossless Predictive Audio Compression
RALF 199 208,836,442 64.25 Real Audio Lossless Format
TTA 199 209,355,992 64.41 The True Audio
FLAC 203 213,396,774 65.65 Free Lossless Audio Codec
PCM 310 325,060,908 100.0 Pulse Code ModulationYes.CaTaClYsM wrote:Can it be crammed into a video file?
http://www.illiminable.com/ogg/CaTaClYsM wrote:how?
http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/
The latter of which being infinitely more useful, because you're only going to be using Theora with the former.
- madmallard
- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2001 6:07 pm
- Status: Cracked up quacker, quacked up cracker
- Location: Atlanta, GA
- Contact:
i would say its good for archiving. . .
would you say its mostly useless for distribution
would you say its mostly useless for distribution
Main Events Director Anime Weekend Atlanta, Kawaii-kon
- Tab.
- Joined: Tue May 13, 2003 10:36 pm
- Status: SLP
- Location: gayville
Not really useless, it all depends on if you really care whether your audio is perfect quality or not. If you do care, you're not taking much of a hit... audio bandwidth is miniscule in comparison to the video even losslessley, and if you're in the range of the 100 mb videos hosted on the org, you could probably get away with PCM with no one the wiser. Let's be conservative and say that lossless compression on average will give you about 2/3 the bitrate of PCM: 1411 * 2/3 = 941 kbps. Now, that's about the same rate as even a moderate quality video using XviD, let alone an excellent quality video, which for no reason should need to be any more than 1.5 mbps unless you've got some serious mftooning going on, in which case 2 is a reasonable ceiling. Either way, with a four minute video, that's not much more than 1/3 of the bandwidth. You've got 3.3 mb to work with before you cross the max for the donut or carrot or whatever it is these days, so you really don't have a problem donating 1 of that to the audio. It's a taste thing though -- and a courtesy to your viewers, if you're not scared of the kind of thought that the RIAA would like to do away with. In addition to that, if you're using flac, two important things are very probable. 1. You're using matroska. 2. You don't care much about vast user compatibility. Those two factors free you up to using video codecs far superior to XviD (well, decently superior. XviD rocks pretty hard.), giving you even more leeway with your audio bandwidth. Thought for food.
- badmartialarts
- Bad Martial Artist
- Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2003 5:31 am
- Location: In ur Kitchen Stadium, eatin ur peppurz
Looks like these codecs in general work really well with classical pieces. I guess it's the repetition or phrases or something. Wonder how they'd fare against a techno track....
Life's short.
eBayhard.
eBayhard.
- madmallard
- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2001 6:07 pm
- Status: Cracked up quacker, quacked up cracker
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- Contact:
that was the point I was making. 
if you're using any combination of those things for -distribution- then you're cutting yourself off at the knees trying to get more people to watch (as opposed to mpeg or xvid or somesuch.)
I use monkey for my own archiving purposes, but if you're going to distribute online you're going not for 60% but more like 90%. At least most of the ORG stuff hovers around that.
if you're using any combination of those things for -distribution- then you're cutting yourself off at the knees trying to get more people to watch (as opposed to mpeg or xvid or somesuch.)
I use monkey for my own archiving purposes, but if you're going to distribute online you're going not for 60% but more like 90%. At least most of the ORG stuff hovers around that.
Main Events Director Anime Weekend Atlanta, Kawaii-kon
- Tab.
- Joined: Tue May 13, 2003 10:36 pm
- Status: SLP
- Location: gayville
Isn't that a bit of circular reasoning? :| You should distribute at 90% compression because everyone does that already. The only compression available thus far for video distribution has been lossy ~90% compression. I am logic champ.sixstop wrote:if you're going to distribute online you're going not for 60% but more like 90%. At least most of the ORG stuff hovers around that.
Still, I'm not sure if the cut in userbase is worth the sound quality. We need a rebel to set the precedent.
- madmallard
- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2001 6:07 pm
- Status: Cracked up quacker, quacked up cracker
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- Contact:
Thats what i said... ;p
If you're distributing, you're not going for 60% compression (even if it is lossless). You're going for 90% so people will be more likely to download, watch, then hopefully tell you they did so.
If you're distributing, you're not going for 60% compression (even if it is lossless). You're going for 90% so people will be more likely to download, watch, then hopefully tell you they did so.
Main Events Director Anime Weekend Atlanta, Kawaii-kon
- Zero1
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 12:51 pm
- Location: Sheffield, United Kingdom
- Contact:
I go for what looks good, and also turns out a reasonable filesize.
I'm currently using 1900kbps for video (abr) and 160 kbps for mp3 audio (abr).
Lame and XviD, winning combination for .avi files.
I dare say I could encode my videos at around 1200kbps with some tweaking and maintain a good amount of the quality, after all XviD's sweetspot seems to be in the region of 800-1000 kbps.
I'm picky and a perfectionist where quality is concerned, and my recent encode looks good to me, except a glitcy patch or two where XviD struggled deciding what quantizer to dish out to some macroblocks.
XviD 1.1 is significantly better, it would probably encode just fine now.
I'm currently using 1900kbps for video (abr) and 160 kbps for mp3 audio (abr).
Lame and XviD, winning combination for .avi files.
I dare say I could encode my videos at around 1200kbps with some tweaking and maintain a good amount of the quality, after all XviD's sweetspot seems to be in the region of 800-1000 kbps.
I'm picky and a perfectionist where quality is concerned, and my recent encode looks good to me, except a glitcy patch or two where XviD struggled deciding what quantizer to dish out to some macroblocks.
XviD 1.1 is significantly better, it would probably encode just fine now.
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