Delusibeta
Banned
Let's be honest here, if y'all were interested in getting more money to artists (and labels), then you would have several Drip.fm subscriptions.
Dat original
You cannot stream true lossless files. It contradicts itself.... it surely will be better quality but at the end of the day people are over compressing the hell out of the music anyways so who cares.... lol
Why couldn't you stream lossless?
It's impossible to stream and play back FLAC data?Long story short, they will be streaming lossless files that will still have some sort of digital encoding/compression in the stream.
Long story short, they will be streaming lossless files that will still have some sort of digital encoding/compression in the stream.
Uh, lossless doesn't mean uncompressed. Calling it lossless implies compression otherwise the distinction is meaningless.
Dat original
Are they actively trying to not sell the service with that test page? I'm listening on Sennheiser HD25-1 ii's and I could not tell the difference on a single track.
They're comparing FLAC with 320kbps AAC so no, most people wont be able to tell the difference and if they are getting them right it's likely pure luck. The benefit of FLAC and other lossless formats is for archiving purposes. The human ear cannot discern the differences in the audio fidelity after a certain point.
For those who want a much better test try the Philips Golden Ear challenge: https://www.goldenears.philips.com/en/introduction.html
No lies there.A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
I don't understand why you would want to stream lossless audio. The major benefit is having a compressed music library you don't have to transcode and ruin when producing copies. As far as audio quality goes controlled blind testing generally eliminates any perception differences between properly encoded 320kbps MP3 and lossless or source. I don't know if many can consistently tell the difference to any statistically valid level.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
spotify uses even the ogg vorbis codec which is with the aac codec the better solution than mp3.
windows user can make their own blind test with foobar2k and some additional component s like http://www.hydrogenaud.io/forums/index.php?showtopic=16295
I did that test some years ago and what I found was that I can rather easily tell the difference between mp3@128kbit/s and lossless formats with a success rate of about 75%.
same results for mp3@128kbit/s and aac@270kbit/s.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
It's actually not true or accurate at all. Jayz' group bought the service after it had already launched....That's hilariously true.
A fan left this on Rihanna's video for Tidal. Lol.
Thought I'd take the test for fun, and at times, I heard a subtle but discernible difference. It was mostly hard to characterize in meaningful way, though, besides having a bit more "depth" and clarity, but nothing that really leaped out at me.
It's not something I would pay that much more for, though. And this is coming from someone who has been formally tested as having a high "musical intelligence" (merely meaning that I can differentiate between say, a violin and a viola, or subtly different rhythms, textures, etc. with a better acuity than average).
Quite surprised by the result to be honest, I think some songs were more obvious than others. Listened with a pair of KRK headphones plugged directly into my MacBook Pro.
I still buy CDs and rip them in AAC 320 kbps, but for some AAA bands and albums (i.e. Steven Wilson's latest), I'll rip them in lossless, even though I mostly listen to my albums on my iPhone in my car or I'll stream it via my Apple TV.
I'm actually a fan of Blu-ray Audios as I love to listen to albums in 5.1 DTS-HD MA, the surround mixing gives new life to some of my favorite albums.