Concerned About Compression Denver CO
The idea behind data compression is relatively simple. Let’s say that the original master for a soundtrack requires 100 units of memory to store. Unfortunately, the release format for that soundtrack only has 25 units of memory available. Audio data compression takes that 100 units and shrinks it down to 25.
Cherry Creek Audio
303-758-4434
303-758-4434
80206-5216
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Cherry Creek Audio
(303) 758-4434
(303) 758-4434
156 Steele St
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Listen Up
303-744-1179
303-744-1179
685 South Pearl Street
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Solstice Multimedia
(303) 698-9900
(303) 698-9900
4601 Quebec Street
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Conundrum Technologies
970-926-2554
970-926-2554
2732 Larimer Street, Suite A
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Dtr Technologies
303-573-6288
303-573-6288
2525 West 6Th Avenue Dtr Technologies
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Listen Up, Inc.
(303) 778-0780
(303) 778-0780
685 South Pearl
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Blu Note Audio + Home Theater
(303)825-7285
(303)825-7285
1243 S Colorado Blvd Blu Note Audio + Home Theater
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Electronic Integration
(303) 761-7277
(303) 761-7277
1205 S. Platte River
Denver, CO
Denver, CO
Concerned About Compression
Lossy Audio Is Acceptable When You Understand Its Limits
With the evolution of video download services, discussions of video compression have become wildly popular. Maybe it’s me, but it seems like audio is being disproportionately ignored.
DYNAMIC RANGE COMPRESSION
There are two different kinds of audio compression: dynamic range compression (DRC) and data compression. If you aren’t sure what dynamic range is, it’s the difference between the noise floor in the
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The effects of DRC can be subtle (think talky drama) or blatant (loud action movie), but your clients will be able to hear it. DRC robs a system of its most-appealing attributes: bass and dynamic slam. I recently auditioned an AVR that automatically applied DRC to the Dolby TrueHD track on Iron Man. It made my high-quality speakers and subwoofers sound like an anemic Home Theater in a Box. DRC is really intended for listening late at night, reducing the dynamics of a soundtrack to avoid scaring the kids or grandma, or preventing dynamic digital soundtracks from overloading small micro-systems. Turn DRC off (not automatic, but off) if you want pure sound performance in a screening room.
DATA COMPRESSION
The idea behind data compression is relatively simple. Let’s say that the original master for a soundtrack requires 100 units of memory to store. Unfortunately, the release format for that soundtrack only has 25 units of memory available. Audio data compression takes that 100 units and shrinks it down to 25.
There are two main categories of data compression: lossy and lossless. With lossy compression, the encoder analyzes that 100 units of memory based on advanced research in the spectral and spatial aspects of human hearing and discards the least significant 75 units in an irrevocable way. Lossless compression analyzes the 100 units and figures out a more efficient way to pack them without
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The good news is that lossless compression produces no audible artifacts. The track you hear in your screening room is identical to the track that was encoded. Your clients will think lossless tracks sound great. A high amount of lossy compression, though, can be fairly audible....
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