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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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On 04/11/2014 08:30 AM, nospam wrote:
In article , dave wrote: Try listening to a viola bow on a moderate bitrate aac+ file, or the breathy sounds of an isolated female vocal. On some material all the shortcomings and mathematical anomalies manifest at once. Certain pure tones can turn fool the decoder to produce "aliasing" artifacts for no reason. aliasing is due to undersampling, not a codec, and the sampling rate is high enough to reproduce all audible frequencies (and then some), especially for anyone past about 20-30 years old. i guarantee that in a double-blind test you won't be able to tell the difference between an original aiff and an aac. countless such tests have shown this to be true for others. I am referring to SBR, which you edited away. |
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