My question is based on temporal considerations. Given a WAV file converted to FLAC and then decoded to WAV, is it possible for artifacts to be introduced? I've been told that FLAC files, when played back into a high-quality sound system, fail to properly reproduce certain kinds of sounds, like ringing bells or the 'clang' of a triangle.

If this were the case, then FLAC would not be lossless in a dynamic sense. As a proponent of FLAC for lossless music storage on a server, this question is important to convincing others that FLAC accurately reproduces the original WAV or PCM file.

Dennis...
------------------------------------------------------------------------

On 5/23/2011 10:37 AM, Tyler Eaves wrote:
FLAC is variable bitrate, but the bitrate is determined by how
efficiently the data can be compressed while maintaining 100% data
integrity.

On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 1:26 PM, Dennis Brunnenmeyer
<[email protected]>  wrote:
Is FLAC a variable bit rate format when streamed? If so, how can it be truly
lossless?
--

Dennis Brunnenmeyer
Director of Engineering
CEDAR RIDGE SYSTEMS
15019 Rattlesnake Road
Grass Valley, CA 95945-8710
Office:   1 (530) 477-9015
Mobile: 1 (530) 320-9025
eMail:  dennisb /at/ chronometrics /dot/ com
http://www.chronometrics.com/crs/index.html


_______________________________________________
Flac-dev mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/flac-dev



--

Dennis Brunnenmeyer
Director of Engineering
CEDAR RIDGE SYSTEMS
15019 Rattlesnake Road
Grass Valley, CA 95945-8710
Office:   1 (530) 477-9015
Mobile: 1 (530) 320-9025
eMail: dennisb /at/ chronometrics /dot/ com
http://www.chronometrics.com/crs/index.html
<http://www.chronometrics.com/crs/index.html>

_______________________________________________
Flac-dev mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/flac-dev

Reply via email to