While compression ('loudness war type') is a real problem for quality sound, usually people who come up with these arguments (and are right) then loose most of their credibility claiming 128kbit mp3 is horrible and only 320 is good enough, yet pretty much nobody can separate them in a blind test..
Compression of the non mp3/wma type, i.e. the 'loudness war' is a real issue. I play some drums and with todays records its really hard to listen what the drummer plays exactly. Was that a floor tom or a bassdrum? Crash cymbals or open hihat? Its just a mass of noise.
Its a mass market thing, most people don't play LFS but rather go for a shallow unrealistic flashy race game. Most people wouldn't know good sound quality if it peed into their ears.. but there is always a market for quality, also with music, but its few and far between.
The most hilarious thing is, with most recordings you really wouldn't even hear a proper difference if it was 8bit. 16 bit, i.e. the CD standard, has some 90 decibels of dynamic range. This is a silly amount because in order to actually hear this range, you'd go rather deaf. 90 decibels of music is really quite loud, and 90 decibels on top of a 'just audible' signal will make your ears bleed! It also plays sounds up to 20khz which most adults don't hear and most cheap sound systems barely play.
Yet people seem to want more bits with super audio cds or blue ray or whatever and a higher sampling rate. Its funny
- The CD was launched, we had 20..20.000hz and 90db of dynamic range. Sorted!
- Recordings get more and more compressed, to the point where in some cases 8bit 32khz wouldn't really sound any worse
- standards change with dvd audio / SACD / Blue ray! Higher sampling rates and resolution because we can!
- hmm lets compress that audio a bit more..
Any advancements in 2 channel audio post the cd are not necessary from a sound quality perspective, yet they raised the numbers.. And the actual recording quality has gone down.
Sad eh!
Oh and an 8 bit audio file has only 128 different levels of 'loudness'. 16bit has some 32768 different levels of loudness.. Yet really, a compressed loud tune, you'd barely hear any difference if it was 8 bit.
sigh! .. oh! good morning :P