iTunes 'not CD-quality'


Recommended Posts

The iPod's low bit-rate has come under fire ? as are Apple claims that iTunes Music Store customers get "true CD audio".

The New York Times advises: "Love the iPod, but don't jump too hastily to fill it with thousands of dollars of iTunes. The tracks are not carbon copies of the CD originals, but compressed versions.

"The smaller files are handy for speedy downloads, space-saving for storage and perfectly serviceable for listening through ear buds when riding on the subway. Not what you will want, however, when your desktop computer becomes the home jukebox and wirelessly sends these simulacra to the entertainment centre in the living room."

In order to create a small file, Apple uses "an extreme form of compression that takes a sample of the sound at intervals," explains the report.

"The bit rate for iTunes, 128, is so low that when played side by side against the original, the difference is audible not only to audio enthusiasts, but also to mortals with ordinary hearing," reporter Randall Stross claims.

See what Apple has to say.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/186749-itunes-not-cd-quality/
Share on other sites

well the reporter who wrote that article has just discovered warm water. Of course they are going to be compressed version of the Cd tracks, who wants to download 100mbs+ per track? "Let me buy this CD, ill just let it download through the day..." Cmon, we all know that we are bound to loose quality as soon as you use a compression method. The New York times should give this guy the "Captian Obvious and his Retard Squad" award.

Did you know the Apple logo is not actually a full Apple? seriously its not !! :woot: ITS GOT A BITE OUT OMFG!! CHECK IT!! and if im not mistaken the leaf on top of the Apple logo PERFECTLY!! fits the bite mark OMFG someone get me a type writer I gotta get this to the people!!!

Did you know the Apple logo is not actually a full Apple? seriously its not !! :woot: ITS GOT A BITE OUT OMFG!! CHECK IT!! and if im not mistaken the leaf on top of the Apple logo PERFECTLY!! fits the bite mark OMFG someone get me a type writer I gotta get this to the people!!!

GET OUT!

Stick to downloading lossless files off usenet or other places

portable audio is never meant to be near as good as home audio, complaining that ipod is compressed is stupid though. I'd rather buy the CD, and rip it to the ipod then BUY their stupid compressed songs, I can compress it myself, and still have the original cd.

I guess for singles, eh, could just download it ;)

"128 provides good sound quality, especially when used in iPods. The majority of people have absolutely no idea what a bit rate is. If Apple offered music encoded at a bit rate higher than 128, customers would select it without realizing that it would fill up their hard drive and portable player quickly."

Then show the different filesizes for different compression rates. Put up a chart. But when I read that, I see "This is what we have, because people are ignorant about all this, so we save them the trouble of thinking".

GET OUT!

:laugh:

Anyway, this guy is really missing the point here though. Almost all the popular codecs out there are extremely compressed...(mp3, aac, ogg) And of course it isnt perfect quality. The only way you can achieve that is throuhg lossless encoders (FLAC, monkeys audio, apple lossless, etc etc) which also compress them also. The writer of this article is pretty dumb if he doesnt include all the facts. Most normal people CANT tell the difference between a 128kbps AAC versus a 192kbps MP3. :rolleyes:

This is the whole problem with online music services - the quality of the files suck. Pair that with the fact that you don't get a "hard" copy in the form of a CD or the CD liners, inserts, and pamphlets and buying albums off of these music services just doesn't make sense to me.

That depends on how much you value your music. I agree with your point, and I typically purchase the artists that I enjoy, because I want to physically "own" the CD...but when there is muck out like that Milkshake song and crap like that, most popular music has become disposable. Easier to delete a few files than toss the whole CD in the trash in a month or so.

well the reporter who wrote that article has just discovered warm water. Of course they are going to be compressed version of the Cd tracks, who wants to download 100mbs+ per track? "Let me buy this CD, ill just let it download through the day..." Cmon, we all know that we are bound to loose quality as soon as you use a compression method. The New York times should give this guy the "Captian Obvious and his Retard Squad" award.

Who wants to pay for something they could get for free? Nobody is benifiting from the money you spend on iTunes. I can honestly tell the difference between 128kb and 320kb, thats why I ripped my favorite audio tracks at 320kb or raw WAV (15-25mb).

If i'm going to pay for something i can get for free, I had damn well better be getting a better quality version of it. I thought this was the whole point of paying for mp3s! People would say "hmm, I really like this single song, so I'm going to pay to get the real deal".

Well to me it sounds CD quality I burn all my tunes to CD and they sound great? its all personal opinion you cant define CD quality because every CD is recorded different doesnt live music being recorded to CD sound bad? lets all define CD quality as 'good' but then the normal AAC and MP3's sound 'good also' the guy is just sprouting his own personal opinun but is pretending to use his own opinion as everyones.

Remember 70% of newspaper is bull - His just making a news story ;)

Well to me it sounds CD quality I burn all my tunes to CD and they sound great? its all personal opinion you cant define CD quality because every CD is recorded different doesnt live music being recorded to CD sound bad? lets all define CD quality as 'good' but then the normal AAC and MP3's sound 'good also' the guy is just sprouting his own personal opinun but is pretending to use his own opinion as everyones.

Remember 70% of newspaper is bull - His just making a news story ;)

go download a nice bass/range test, 20hz to 20khz is good. And make sure its a high quality one, not a recompressed one. Now recompress it to 128kb, and notice how either the top and bottom ranges are distorted, or you lose no filesize at all.

I guess the CD quality doesn't really matter if you can't tell the difference, but I apparently have sensitive ears, so I can :)

,Jul 5 2004, 20:43] Isn't that based on personal opinion? Or is there an actual in-stone standard of what "CD Quality" is?

No, that's fact. A lossy codec can not encode music at "CD Quality", doesn't matter that encoder (like Lame and others) have presents for. Lossy codec=loss of data. Loss of data=can't be true "cd quality"

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • To be fair, it wasn't going anywhere. Even when Windows Phone could run Android APKs, Google didn't want any of it so it'd never work and the same thing happened with Windows. It was never about the store or it's users, it was always the developers and who they aligned to.
    • Wake me up when this comes to PC. Until then... zzzzzzzz....
    • I was expecting the end of the world to happen before this game or elder scroll 6 to come out.
    • OpenAI and Broadcom unveil Jalapeño, a new AI chip built for LLM inference by Pradeep Viswanathan Image by OpenAI Thanks to the exponential growth of ChatGPT and other LLM-based applications, NVIDIA has grown from a $200 billion company into the first public company to reach a $5 trillion market cap. Even though hyperscalers such as Google and Amazon have their own mature AI accelerators, NVIDIA still dominates the AI infrastructure market with multiple generations of GPUs. Microsoft, OpenAI, and Meta remain among NVIDIA’s largest customers, while Google and Amazon continue to be significant NVIDIA customers as they serve AI workloads for customers on their cloud platforms. Today, OpenAI and Broadcom announced Jalapeño, OpenAI’s first custom “Intelligence Processor” designed specifically for large language model inference. The new chip is the first product from a multi-generation compute platform being developed by OpenAI. OpenAI highlighted that Jalapeño was built from the ground up for current and future LLM workloads, rather than being a general-purpose accelerator adapted for AI. Despite heavy competition from Gemini, Claude, Copilot, and others, ChatGPT remains the most used AI platform in the world. OpenAI mentioned that it leveraged its knowledge of how its models and products run at scale, including ChatGPT, Codex, the API, and future agentic AI systems, to design this new chipset. Its chip architecture reduces data movement while balancing compute, memory, and networking resources. Jalapeño will be deployed in production systems starting in late 2026; however, engineering samples are already running machine learning workloads in OpenAI’s labs at production target frequency and power. According to its internal testing, OpenAI claims this chip can deliver “substantially better” performance per watt, and a detailed technical report is expected in the coming months. While OpenAI designed the chip, Broadcom handled silicon implementation and networking technologies, including Tomahawk networking silicon, and Celestica is assisting with board, rack, and system-level integration. OpenAI pointed out that Jalapeño went from initial design to manufacturing tape-out in just nine months, which it claims is the fastest ASIC development cycle achieved for a high-performance advanced semiconductor. The company attributed the speed of development to its own LLMs, which were used during the chip design and optimization process. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan stated that the company's plan is to deploy the Jalapeño platform at a gigawatt scale with Microsoft and other partners starting in 2026. With Jalapeño, OpenAI joins Google, Microsoft, and Amazon to become a full-stack AI player. The company already develops models and products, and is now moving deeper into infrastructure, including chips, kernels, networking, scheduling, and deployment systems.
    • I'm aware. That information should have been included in the article, making it more complete and information.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      448
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      176
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      123
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      81
    5. 5
      Xenon
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!