Do MP3s degrade in quality over time?


Recommended Posts

The velocidensity has nothing to do with it. It's about the quality of the fabrication of the alomar plates within the drives themselves. Lower quality plates will have inconsistent spin ups which can, through centrifugal force, scatter the files across the surface of the drive. Error checking, by most media software, will place priority on continuous playback instead of fragment seeking, so the missing fragments are simply ignored. The interface of the drive has nothing to do with it, either. It's all about the quality of the alomar plates and how well the drive is built, overall. If the drive is poorly built, you can try changing it's mounting position every few months so that the forces are reversed and keep everything centered.

lol

The velocidensity has nothing to do with it. It's about the quality of the fabrication of the alomar plates within the drives themselves. Lower quality plates will have inconsistent spin ups which can, through centrifugal force, scatter the files across the surface of the drive. Error checking, by most media software, will place priority on continuous playback instead of fragment seeking, so the missing fragments are simply ignored. The interface of the drive has nothing to do with it, either. It's all about the quality of the alomar plates and how well the drive is built, overall. If the drive is poorly built, you can try changing it's mounting position every few months so that the forces are reversed and keep everything centered.

Trolling score 10/10 :laugh:

The velocidensity has nothing to do with it. It's about the quality of the fabrication of the alomar plates within the drives themselves. Lower quality plates will have inconsistent spin ups which can, through centrifugal force, scatter the files across the surface of the drive. Error checking, by most media software, will place priority on continuous playback instead of fragment seeking, so the missing fragments are simply ignored. The interface of the drive has nothing to do with it, either. It's all about the quality of the alomar plates and how well the drive is built, overall. If the drive is poorly built, you can try changing it's mounting position every few months so that the forces are reversed and keep everything centered.

If you remodulate the secondary theta inhibitor to counter the effects of gravitational distortions, lower quality alomar plates shouldn't be affected.

[/color]

If you remodulate the secondary theta inhibitor to counter the effects of gravitational distortions, lower quality alomar plates shouldn't be affected.

However, that technique is not to be trusted. The secondary theta inhibitor will degrade and eventually fail over time thus causing the alomar plates to shift out of position and become misaligned.

However, that technique is not to be trusted. The secondary theta inhibitor will degrade and eventually fail over time thus causing the alomar plates to shift out of position and become misaligned.

Not if you use a gravitronic pulse inverter module.

  • 2 weeks later...

[/color]

If you remodulate the secondary theta inhibitor to counter the effects of gravitational distortions, lower quality alomar plates shouldn't be affected.

However, that technique is not to be trusted. The secondary theta inhibitor will degrade and eventually fail over time thus causing the alomar plates to shift out of position and become misaligned.

Not if you use a gravitronic pulse inverter module.

what?? :huh: :huh: :huh: :huh: :huh:

I was having a discussion with a good friend of mine on the difference between FLAC and mp3(320). He made a very startling claim that I didn't think was possible, he told me "Well yes. Hearing the difference now isn?t the reason to encode to FLAC. FLAC uses lossless compression, while MP3 is ?lossy?. What this means is that for each year the MP3 sits on your hard drive, it will lose roughly 12kbps, assuming you have SATA ? it?s about 15kbps on IDE, but only 7kbps on SCSI, due to rotational velocidensity. You don?t want to know how much worse it is on CD-ROM or other optical media."

Is there any merit to what he just said?

OMG Hahahahahahaha Now that's funny.

Lossless refers to the compression used in converting the audio file, a lossless format is one which does not lose any fidelity when converted, that's why the filesizes are always much higher than, for example, mp3s. The trade-off in quality is the size of the finished file.

Dude that's really grabbing for an explanation. It's bits and bytes. The ONLY way that file is going to lose anything is in a botched copy or format conversion. Period.

But I forget, you start UFO threads. :rolleyes:

No idea what UFOs have to do with MP3s.

Any magnetic recording surface can degrade over time.

I was not saying that MP3 files automatically become less quality.

I was pointing out that you should back up ANY files, to more than one source.

I was having a discussion with a good friend of mine on the difference between FLAC and mp3(320). He made a very startling claim that I didn't think was possible, he told me "Well yes. Hearing the difference now isn?t the reason to encode to FLAC. FLAC uses lossless compression, while MP3 is ?lossy?. What this means is that for each year the MP3 sits on your hard drive, it will lose roughly 12kbps, assuming you have SATA ? it?s about 15kbps on IDE, but only 7kbps on SCSI, due to rotational velocidensity. You don?t want to know how much worse it is on CD-ROM or other optical media."

Is there any merit to what he just said?

Haha.

people still have not really mentioned that a quality made MP3 (i.e. LAME (LAME v3.99.3) @ v2 setting (average of around 190kbps) it's very unlikely the vast majority of people would be able to detect it from the original when you do a ABX test (which you can do using Foobar2000 with the ABX plugin) as that's pretty much only way to prove if you can as ill bet there are many people out there who 'believe' they can hear a difference but when you actually do a ABX Test ill bet most will do a lot worse than they think they will.

hell, i would be willing to bet most people won't even be able to detect a LAME v5 (average of 130kbps) encoded MP3 from the original FLAC file on most music. but yet still people claim MP3 sucks and FLAC is great but in the real world ABX tests say differently and it's just not worth using FLAC on most portable devices due to storage space reasons either ;)

just doing a ABX test on myself on some random music files i have... once i hit 100kbps (i.e. q0.35) on Nero's AAC Encoder i can't tell the differenece between the original FLAC file as to me that's the sweet spot for getting smallest possible file size with basically same sound quality as the original. although if your hearing is above average you can probably detect a difference but i would be willing to bet most people won't be able to notice much if any difference between the original FLAC vs a 100kbps AAC (.m4a) file (Nero AAC Encoder v1.5.4.0 @ q0.35) and if they can it won't be super easy to detect especially on most music.

p.s. i still prefer keeping the original FLAC files on my PC (or other backup copies) as then if you ever need to re-rip to whatever lossy format you want you can do it quickly using Foobar2000 and convert to basically any format/bit rate you want be it MP3/MPC/AAC/OGG etc.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Password Safe 3.72.0 by Razvan Serea Password Safe is a password database utility. Like many other such products, commercial and otherwise, it stores your passwords in an encrypted file, allowing you to remember only one password (the "safe combination"), instead of all the username/password combinations that you use. Once stored, your user names and passwords are just a few clicks away. Using Password Safe you can organize your passwords using your own customizable references—for example, by user ID, category, web site, or location. You can choose to store all your passwords in a single encrypted master password list (an encrypted password database), or use multiple databases to further organize your passwords (work and home, for example). And with its intuitive interface you will be up and running in minutes. PasswordSafe was originally designed by the renowned security technologist Bruce Schneier and released as a free utility application. Password Safe 3.72.0 changelog: Fixed bugs Improved font scale handling - should resolve font size issues on high resolution displays. GH1749 In the Master Password Setup window, "Show Master Password" is no longer truncated on some displays. GH1092, SF1595 Size and position of main window is now correctly restored on scaled displays. SF1630 Keep password expiry date when both password and password expiry are changed; don't clear a non-recurring expiry when the password's changed. SF1628 Custom values can now be copied to the clipboard in read-only mode via Ctrl-C and right-click->Copy Value. New features GH1196 Dark display mode support: Password Safe now supports the system display mode, as well as setting the mode directly via Manage->Options->Display->Display Mode. This change also updates the general "look & feel" of the app to the current Windows theme. Known limitations: The Date picker and keyboard shortcut controls do not switch to dark theme The Customize Toolbar dialog does not switch to dark theme Custom Field support has been added to the more advanced features: Filters XML and Text import and export Comparison, Sync and Merge databases SF938 Custom field values may now be selected by name and copied via a "Copy Custom Field Value..." submenu in the entry context popup menu. SF936 Notes and Custom fields layout now overlap, selectable by tabs, resulting in a more compact and less cluttered layout. SF935 Autotype: Specifying '\v{name}' in the autotype text will cause the corresponding value to be autotyped. Download: PasswordSafe 64-bit | Portable 64-bit | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: PasswordSafe 32-bit | Portable 32-bit View: PasswordSafe Website | Quickstart Guide | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Google DeepMind published a document on June 18, 2026, that may be the most consequential admission yet from a frontier AI lab: alignment training alone cannot guarantee that AI agents will remain under human control, so structural containment must be built before more capable models arrive.............. https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318758/20260620/google-deepmind-ai-control-roadmap-when-alignment-fails-defense-depth-takes-over.htm  
    • I've got a SoundBlasterX G6 that I use in my streaming setup. Sounds great to me and I've had zero issues with the ancient software package so far in Win11. That G6 has 7.1, Dolby, fully working SPDIF and since it's a USB device it's outside of my rig so I don't have to worry about EMF distortion. Looks like for now this is a pass for me as I think I have better hardware....
    • How do you connect 5.1 Speakers to this thing?
    • I agree with both of you... It's absolutely imperative that science is completely based on actual proven facts and hard evidence and is not considered dogmatic in any way. Science is not a religion and it will never be, and that's exactly how it's supposed to be.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      DrWankel earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      DrWankel earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      Supreme Spray LV earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Genuinetonerink- Dubai earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      502
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      170
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      88
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!