mseydel
truculent
I'm a bit of a Noob when it comes to paying for my downloaded music.
Most of my existing music files are in .mp3 format, encoded at minimum 160 kbps...lots of these are from a few years ago, when SoundJam was cutting edge(sniff). What's odd is that even some random junk I acquired
(mostly *****) at 128 kbps sounds better than the 128 kbps AAC files that I've purchased recently from the iTunes Store. I don't see any place to change the quality of the download I'm paying for, but so far, I'm hella disappointed. I thought at first it was just a few poorly recorded tracks, which I couldn't blame on iTunes...but my ears really notice the difference on every track I've gotten off the iTunes Store, and they're not happy.
I thought in theory, AAC was supposed to provided smaller files with richer sound quality. Right?![Confused :confused: :confused:](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
Most of my existing music files are in .mp3 format, encoded at minimum 160 kbps...lots of these are from a few years ago, when SoundJam was cutting edge(sniff). What's odd is that even some random junk I acquired
(mostly *****) at 128 kbps sounds better than the 128 kbps AAC files that I've purchased recently from the iTunes Store. I don't see any place to change the quality of the download I'm paying for, but so far, I'm hella disappointed. I thought at first it was just a few poorly recorded tracks, which I couldn't blame on iTunes...but my ears really notice the difference on every track I've gotten off the iTunes Store, and they're not happy.
I thought in theory, AAC was supposed to provided smaller files with richer sound quality. Right?