File conversion

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Pete Porchos
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File conversion

Post by Pete Porchos » Sat Oct 20, 2007 10:10 pm

I tried to import an m4a (AAC) file into Audacity a few minutes ago. But no joy.

I downloaded a converter program (Free Mp3 Wma Converter - Lite Edition 1.6) and it seems to do the job just fine, but I was wondering what in the way of sound quality is sacrificed when converting files in this way?

Pete

kozikowski
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Re: File conversion

Post by kozikowski » Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:57 am

It depends entirely on what you converted them to and how the AAC was made. If you converted to 48000/16bit WAV then there is no further damage, and there was minimal damage on the AAC -> PCM step.

If whoever made the AAC file did a good job, then you win.

If the AAC creator did a sloppy job and you converted to MP3, then you lose. I would bet there is significant damager to the sound.

Both MP3 and AAC are slider-based, lossy compressors and both create damage when they work. Fast--Bad Quality--Small Files on one side of the export slider and Slow--Very Good Quality--Big Files on the other. Pick your setting(s).

Koz

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