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Tom Potter
 
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wrote in message
oups.com...

I am interested in analyzing surfaces of objects
to detect natural and man-made shaping of the object surface,
and I have been experimenting,
using a MP3 player/recorder to record the sound,
as I drag various fabrics attached to the player across the objects.


Are you actually MP3-compressing the received data? I would be very
concerned that you're losing important information there. MP3 was
designed to reproduce audio, it wasn't designed as a general-purpose
compression algorithm for analog data capture sessions.

It sounds like each of these samples is probably not very large, can
you capture them without compression, i.e. as raw PCM data?


I am experimenting using the wave recording feature
of MP3 players, and this works okay,
except for the resonances in my MP3 player cases,
and in my "transducer interfaces".

As far as I know,
no MP3 player compresses the audio input.

In other words, they have an MP3 decoder,
but not an MP3 encoder on the chip.

But that said, it really doesn't matter if it
compressed to MP3 or not,
as lossy encoding won't affect my analysis much.

--
Tom Potter
http://home.earthlink.net/~tdp
http://photos.yahoo.com/tdp1001