WMA 9.2 Lossless or WAV?


Recommended Posts

The only issue I can think of, if I remember right, is WAV and its support of ID3 metadata and embedded album art but like I said, I can't remember.

 

Does not support metadata, or at least, not through Windows Explorer. Though Windows Explorer does not even support ID3v2.4 so that doesn't say much about it.

I have a couple believe it or not but I have no idea why I was thinking of just leaving the setting on for everything haha. Needless to say when I turned it down it made a BIG difference taking the folder size down to 520 MB. I'm surprised though that WAV isn't much bigger, I might go with that.

They were such great albums!!!

Just use WAV then, it's more compatible and you get the advantages of uncompressed audio (null seek times, data corruption resistance).

Does not support metadata, or at least, not through Windows Explorer. Though Windows Explorer does not even support ID3v2.4 so that doesn't say much about it.

I was worried about the metadata issue but I think it'll be okay.

I was worried about the metadata issue but I think it'll be okay.

 

Might want to try MP3tag, perhaps. It is great for tagging FLACs, MP3s, and WMAs, though I haven't tried it with WAVs so I am not sure if it can embed metadata (but then, whatever you're accessing the files with also needs to support the same format of metadata). Link: http://www.mp3tag.de/en/index.html

As storage space is so cheap and you want maximum compatibility I would say go with the nice and simple WAV format. It means you will need more space than if you were to use something like FLAC but it is probably the best solution for you.

 

I am not an audiophile but I do have decent-ish equipment so I like to have good quality music too. For on the go I just have everything in VBR MP3 as I am never going to be able to tell the difference when on a train or walking down the street but for my home audio system everything is in FLAC.

 

I would highly advise you to avoid things such as WMA. You never know when you might switch to a non-Windows platform and be ###### out of luck! Also I have been down the WMA route and got burned with incompatibilities using newer media players not supporting some of the old bits of WMA Pro encoded files. Was very painful so I switched to FLAC for my archiving as it is open source and spec and has amazing support everywhere.

Apple also released an opensource, lossless codec called ALAC 

Windows Phone actually used to support it natively. But for whatever reason, WP8 doesn't anymore.

 

Desktop Windows (including 8/RT) certainly supports the container format (with its metadata etc.) just fine, not sure why it doesn't yet natively support the codec itself, but Microsoft should get on it!

 

EDIT: Apparently Google Play supports ALAC, too

Might want to try MP3tag, perhaps. It is great for tagging FLACs, MP3s, and WMAs, though I haven't tried it with WAVs so I am not sure if it can embed metadata (but then, whatever you're accessing the files with also needs to support the same format of metadata). Link: http://www.mp3tag.de/en/index.html

I'm a big fan already :yes:

Why would you need to convert someone else's archive of music ?

 

 

Because although windows plays WMA fine, nothing else does. If I wanted to listen to WMA's I need to convert them to an open standard which is supported by my various media players, laptops, phones and car decks.

 

If OP never intends to share his archive of WMAs & plans to stick with windows for ever, it really don't matter what I think.

Because although windows plays WMA fine, nothing else does. If I wanted to listen to WMA's I need to convert them to an open standard which is supported by my various media players, laptops, phones and car decks.

 

If OP never intends to share his archive of WMAs & plans to stick with windows for ever, it really don't matter what I think.

 

Why would he share HIS library ? can't his friends buy their own music ? 

 

either way, read the OP's post, this is for him, not for sharing with his friends(wich is kind of illegal anyway), and he has devices that can read WAV and WMA and not FLAC, so suggesting FLAC is kind of useless. 

 

and the beauty of lossless, if you change devices you can easily convert the library without losing quality unlike lossy formats. 

the beauty of lossless, if you change devices you can easily convert the library without losing quality unlike lossy formats. 

 

This bears repeating.  At this point, I'd therefore be more concerned with proper metadata support, which instantly rules out WAV, in my opinion, because it is terrible in that regard.

 

So with only one other option left, use WMA Lossless, and then possibly think about converting it to a more broadly supported (and ideally open source, i.e. FLAC or ALAC) lossless format in the future.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • MusicBee 3.6.9668 by Razvan Serea MusicBee is an application geared toward managing extensive music collections, easy to use and with a comprehensive feature set. It makes it easy to organize, find, and play music files on your computer, on portable devices, and on the Web. It provides playback of a wide range of audio formats, smart playlists with the ability to discover and play new music from the web, advanced tag editing with automated artwork and tag look up, folder monitoring, automated file re-organization, portable device synchronization, and secure CD ripping with AccurateRip verification. MusicBee features: Supported formats: MP3, AAC, M4A, MPC, OGG, FLAC, APE, TAK, WV, WMA and WAV. Audio CDs: Audio CD playback and ripping (with CD-Text capabilities) is supported. CD tracks can be ripped (in fast or secure mode) as individual files or as a single album with embedded cuesheet. Conversion: Conversion from and to all supported formats as metadata are preserved. Synchronization of tags only (in case that the output file already exists) instead of reencoding is possible. ReplayGain support: both playback and calculation. File Organization: Organization and renaming of music files into folders and files based on tag values such as artist, album, name, track number, etc. that can be specified. MusicBee can do this automatically for all files in a music library or the user can choose the files or folders themselves. Web Browsing: Browsing of the web using Mozilla's XULRunner environment. Scrobbling: Tracks played from MusicBee can optionally be scrobbled to Last.fm. Customizable user interface layout. Customizable keyboard shortcuts. MiniLyrics support Download: MusicBee 3.6.9668 | MusicBee Portable | ~9.0 MB (Freeware) Download: Windows Store Edition View: MusicBee Home page | Release Notes | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • On xiaomi hyperos there's also an option to disable google assistant. I've got everything disabled. Only thing I do have installed is a web wrapped for duck.ai which claims to let you use various AIs anonymously
    • I need to understand the rationale of not shipping all of these K2 improvements in a single update/release. It's giving "we will fix Windows 11 but no commitments". It seems to me that they just announce these improvements just to appease the community.
    • The term "RTM" is long gone starting with Windows 10. Every current release is a GA build. This is the result of MS making Windows as a Service (WaaS).
    • Looks like no official TBW rating, which should be a required listing in my opinion for sites like Amazon (hell, put it on the box too.)
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Dedicated
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      516
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      186
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      87
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      79
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!