the new music format! 24 bit audio and DVD's for all?
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- george martin
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the new music format! 24 bit audio and DVD's for all?
I've long sensed it and hoped it would come -
a post on the older cd's popped it into my mind again -
how long do you think the transition will take?
will all CD/DVD players start playing a DVD audio disc?
can one burn a DVD audio disc? if so, how?
i'm personally thinking of releasing only 24bit along with vinyl for my personal singles -
viable?
how else do we start the phase out of CD, and start embracing DVD's as they become cheaper to assimilate into everything?
a post on the older cd's popped it into my mind again -
how long do you think the transition will take?
will all CD/DVD players start playing a DVD audio disc?
can one burn a DVD audio disc? if so, how?
i'm personally thinking of releasing only 24bit along with vinyl for my personal singles -
viable?
how else do we start the phase out of CD, and start embracing DVD's as they become cheaper to assimilate into everything?
we are the village green
preservation society
god bless +6 tape
valves and serviceability
*chief tech and R&D shaman at shadow hills industries*
preservation society
god bless +6 tape
valves and serviceability
*chief tech and R&D shaman at shadow hills industries*
- JGriffin
- zen recordist
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Is DVD-audio even still a viable format? I ain't trying to be snarky, I honestly can't keep up with the changing formats.
"Jeweller, you've failed. Jeweller."
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
- farview
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They tried that a long time ago. It didn't take.
The thing that you seem to be missing is the fact that physical formats are going away. People are listening to mp3s, which sound worse than CDs, because of the convienience. Ipods don't sound great, mp3s don't sound great, earbuds don't sound great, but that is what people are listening to.
It's because the general public really doesn't care about fidelity, much less things like smoother reverb tails...
People are listening to music while they are on the move, extra dynamic range will actually be a problem for people listening in the car, bus, train, etc... because the quiet stuff will fall below the ambient din. (try listening to the classical FM station in your car driving on the tollway)
The thing that you seem to be missing is the fact that physical formats are going away. People are listening to mp3s, which sound worse than CDs, because of the convienience. Ipods don't sound great, mp3s don't sound great, earbuds don't sound great, but that is what people are listening to.
It's because the general public really doesn't care about fidelity, much less things like smoother reverb tails...
People are listening to music while they are on the move, extra dynamic range will actually be a problem for people listening in the car, bus, train, etc... because the quiet stuff will fall below the ambient din. (try listening to the classical FM station in your car driving on the tollway)
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- dead but not forgotten
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but in a few years when music players are 200-500 gigs or more, you could put tons of songs on there in 24/41, or even 24/96. fidelity was the price you paid for download speeds and storage space. Both of those conditions will slowly but surely be optimized in the next few years. (storage faster than broadband speeds of course).
- farview
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That's true, but you would still have to find a way to make people give a crap enough to buy into it.Electricide wrote:but in a few years when music players are 200-500 gigs or more, you could put tons of songs on there in 24/41, or even 24/96. fidelity was the price you paid for download speeds and storage space. Both of those conditions will slowly but surely be optimized in the next few years. (storage faster than broadband speeds of course).
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buy what? I agree that physical delivery mediums are disappearing, at least to the degree where industry-wide investment in one isn't likely to happen on the scale of prior generations.
If you assume artists are still recording and storing their mixes at high resolution, the cost to them is the same whether they put mp3's or 24/882 files out for download. Delivery services might charge more because the files take up more space. But the portable device is becoming the center of both mobile AND home listening environments, so depending on the price I think people would opt for hi rez.
Of course if you're like most people and you're getting everything for free then the cost to you AND to the artist is the same whether it's hi rez or mp3.
If you assume artists are still recording and storing their mixes at high resolution, the cost to them is the same whether they put mp3's or 24/882 files out for download. Delivery services might charge more because the files take up more space. But the portable device is becoming the center of both mobile AND home listening environments, so depending on the price I think people would opt for hi rez.
Of course if you're like most people and you're getting everything for free then the cost to you AND to the artist is the same whether it's hi rez or mp3.
- @?,*???&?
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Re: the new music format! 24 bit audio and DVD's for all?
Totally. It's about hardware speed and capability. 24-bit/192KHz can be a reality, but its about data upload and download without a delivery format such a disc and without the constraints of uber slow internet and uber small storage devices.themagicmanmdt wrote:viable?
The internet got choked by the Bush administration. The storage size and processor hold-up is chip manufacturing technology related. Until these processes get better or there's a major revolution in this technology, we are relegated to what we have. What is the average time for breakthroughs in hardware? Do the trends show it's 5-year cycles? I don't know, but I am sure those trends are out there to be gleaned.
My answer to your question would be 5 to 15 years to make it to high-resolution for the consumer.
Interesting to note that Columbia did tests with consumers in the late 1940's and the public responded they preferred audio with a severely restricted frequency response with 8KHz as the highest frequency as compared to full-frequency program material from 20Hz to 20KHz. That same argument could be made today when consumers flock to .mp3 as a preferred format. However today it's not about the 'sound' it's about the 'convenience'.
- JGriffin
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Re: the new music format! 24 bit audio and DVD's for all?
Korea is going to have 10GB/sec download speeds within the year. They're not too far from that now. The USA is way behind.@?,*???&? wrote:Totally. It's about hardware speed and capability. 24-bit/192KHz can be a reality, but its about data upload and download without a delivery format such a disc and without the constraints of uber slow internet and uber small storage devices.themagicmanmdt wrote:viable?
"Jeweller, you've failed. Jeweller."
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
Re: the new music format! 24 bit audio and DVD's for all?
USA! USA! USA!dwlb wrote:Korea is going to have 10GB/sec download speeds within the year. They're not too far from that now. The USA is way behind.@?,*???&? wrote:Totally. It's about hardware speed and capability. 24-bit/192KHz can be a reality, but its about data upload and download without a delivery format such a disc and without the constraints of uber slow internet and uber small storage devices.themagicmanmdt wrote:viable?
*wonders when it will become possible to afford heat in the wintertime again*
?What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears.? -- Seneca
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- george martin
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how did DVD audio fail?
i still feel there's about 20% of the population who can tell that 24 bit sounds better if you just sit them down and show them.
i intend on sitting them down and showing them! someone has to, right?
so, why cave in?
viva la 24bit revolution!
i still feel there's about 20% of the population who can tell that 24 bit sounds better if you just sit them down and show them.
i intend on sitting them down and showing them! someone has to, right?
so, why cave in?
viva la 24bit revolution!
we are the village green
preservation society
god bless +6 tape
valves and serviceability
*chief tech and R&D shaman at shadow hills industries*
preservation society
god bless +6 tape
valves and serviceability
*chief tech and R&D shaman at shadow hills industries*
DVD-A, SACD, HD-DVD. All dead. Very dead.
Check this.
DTS-HD can be put on a Blu-ray disc at 24/192 for stereo, 24/48 for up to 7.1 and goes down HDMI to a dts reciever. If the reciever is older or doesn't have HDMI than it streams the DTS core (which is compressed) or if it's an HDMI compatible dts decoder it will give you the whole shebang.
Backwards compatible and consumers actually want it because all the movies are coming out on blu-ray.
Any kind of special disc that takes a special player is not gonna do well, especially with physical media dying on the vine. But if you're looking for a fairly future-proof medium put it on a blu-ray... then there's a chance in hell that people can buy it and listen to it.
Also, most blu-ray players decode the audio to the analog outs if you don't want to deal with a decoder... and yes, they're spec'd for 24/192... but the converters are probably sound-blaster quality. Oh well.
Check this.
DTS-HD can be put on a Blu-ray disc at 24/192 for stereo, 24/48 for up to 7.1 and goes down HDMI to a dts reciever. If the reciever is older or doesn't have HDMI than it streams the DTS core (which is compressed) or if it's an HDMI compatible dts decoder it will give you the whole shebang.
Backwards compatible and consumers actually want it because all the movies are coming out on blu-ray.
Any kind of special disc that takes a special player is not gonna do well, especially with physical media dying on the vine. But if you're looking for a fairly future-proof medium put it on a blu-ray... then there's a chance in hell that people can buy it and listen to it.
Also, most blu-ray players decode the audio to the analog outs if you don't want to deal with a decoder... and yes, they're spec'd for 24/192... but the converters are probably sound-blaster quality. Oh well.
Everything louder than everything else.
- losthighway
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- Brett Siler
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nah man.. The only physical copy that seems to stand the test of time is vinyl. Other that that it is all going digital. I like both formats so I embrace it.
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