Curious Hair wrote:
As I mentioned in one of the other threads, I've had a chunk of my library ripped at 128 for about 14 years, namely all my Pink Floyd, and I'm now gonna go ahead and rip them as FLACs (or try until I find out they're all scratched up). Who here has the ears or the setup to tell a 320 mp3 from lossless? I downloaded some Radiohead and Brian Eno in FLAC, and it sounds great, at least I tell myself.
I had a feeling you started a thread about this and I (shudders) used the search function to find it.
How have you (
if you have) been progressing thru your process so far?
I think anyone would agree that 128 is pretty much garbage (unless it's 2000 and you're just praying that Here Come the Warm Jets from limewire or wherever is actually the album and not mislabeled German piss porn).
I have been, slowly but surely, been erasing and re-loading my collection using Apple Lossless, because I am realizing that my AAC files weren't even 320, but 256. Some of the iTunes individual tracks I bought 10 years ago are 128, but I can always find HQ files on Spotify. I'm mostly updating my stuff because a: I don't really find it to be that much of a chore, b: my entire collection was on 2 separate external hard drives, and I want everything in one place on iTunes, and c: I also kinda tell myself that I can hear the difference when I can't sometimes, but a lot of times I can tell, and I just want the best available digital file so I can stow these cds away for good or until I move. If you've got the HD space, and the time and patience, I don't see why anyone wouldn't just encode with Apple lossless. The only thing I know about FLAC is that I have about 30 or 40 pieces that I can only play using VLC player, so I'm also in the process of trying to find a lot of that stuff at the library so I can just get rid of the FLAC stuff entirely. I like VLC's EQ abilities, but in general, it's a pain in the ass but iTunes and my iPhone won't play them otherwise, so....that's where I'm at.