search for: mpegplus

Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "mpegplus".

2003 Jun 17
0
MPEGplus explanation - link correction
sorry, here is the correct link to the MPEGplus explanation by Andree Buschmann: http://www.personal.uni-jena.de/~pfk/mpp/audiocoder_english.html -- p-h-g _____________________________________________________________________ Envie de discuter en "live" avec vos amis ? Télécharger MSN Messenger http://www.ifrance.com/_reloc/m la 1è...
2001 Jun 21
3
TwinVQ versus The World
The last few threads have really been interesting. Technologies that are currently on the market are MP3, RealAudio, and Windows Media (pre-version8). Technologies currently in progress or just shipped are Ogg Vorbis and mp3pro. I don't think anyone has mentioned TwinVQ on this list. While exploring alternatives to MP3 (which is when I also found Vorbis), I noticed TwinVQ. I encoded
2001 May 29
2
One codebook for all audiofiles?
[ I'm not in the list because I didn't find a digested version; please move the lists to sourceforge.net, and we would have the digested version. I read the replies from the archive. ] Hello. Would it be possible to allow Vorbis use the same codebook for multiple files? I could keep a 650 MB codebook on CD-R and use that for all my audiofiles. If that is possible, how much the
2002 Jan 13
3
RC3: I'm impressed
...g on Ogg and Vorbis, and I really appreciate the work of you all. It looks like the core codec work is done by Monty, and the quality of this result by just one person says something about that person. Also, I really like how he answers questions in interviews, and on Slashdot. :^) I know that MPEGPlus too is done by one person, and seems to work well, but I did not, and will not, test it, since its author is not willing to open source it, and this renders it useless to me. So, hats off to Monty, and to the rest of you! I already contributed via PayPal a few weeks ago and will do so again soo...
2001 Jan 02
5
Idea for gapless tracks
We all know that currently Vorbis is the only codec out there that doesn't add any silence to the decoded file, so when you decode your .ogg file the resulting .wav will be exactly the same length as the original one. This is very useful when encoding gapless songs (like live concerts...). But since Vorbis is a lossy codec, even though there is no silence added, sometimes you can still hear a