ATRAC3Plus to MP3
Reply #4 – 2004-01-11 02:25:11
I read the message thread from you (atici) about Atrac3Plus and your Ph.D. in Math. I wanted to contact you directly to pick your brain on this stuff Don't pick my brain it's happy where it is now. I don't remember mentioning this in any thread, so it's interesting how you came across that info. I am a grad student. I don't have a Ph.D. yet but hopefully I'll get one next year.The reason why I need to convert from ATRAC3 format is that I recorded some music from cassette tapes (bluh...) to MD. I need to know how to move the recorded tracks from the MD (media) into my computer's hard drive and then convert them to MP3PRO (yeah, I prefer MP3PRO over just MP3) so that transfered into a solid state MP3 player. There seems to be lots of loss in this procedure. A solid state MP3 player could not decode MP3Pro anyway, so you'd be better off with LAME MP3 encodes directly from your cassette.I am confused as to what MDLP Type-S I think that should be regular ATRAC. Check this .BTW (atici), I am sold on ATRAC3 as this SONY Report indicates: No matter how high quality the format is, the amount of information that could be retained with 64kbps is very limited. HE-AAC probably will be much better a choice for such low bitrate encoding. In the link I gave for your other thread, experienced people provide their test results to conclude ATRAC3plus is not that amazing. So don't believe that hype. Get a CD/flash player with MP3 and AAC playback instead if you still can return your Minidisc player.When I was at a Sony Store yesterday, the sales guy told me that MDLP Type-S is not the same as ATRAC3Plus and that the next generation of MiniDisc players/recorders will by able to store more songs/tracks on a minidisc when ATRAC3Plus is supported. I think he's right. But this will come at the expense of quality loss again. When ATRAC3plus is supported you'll be able to store more lower quality files.