I may be wrong, but my understanding is that AAC is an implementation of the 
MPEG4 standard. This didn't surprise me, at all, when I read it at 
Wikipedia, as I cannot hear any difference between the .AAC files I rip from 
CDs and the .M4A files I uploaded from my brother's IPod. But I prefer .AAC 
simply because it produces a smaller file - about a tenth of a meg smaller 
per CD. With the hundreds of CDs I've ripped to my Maxtor, that adds up.

Blessed Be,

Dana
that's Dayna, D A N A, NOT Donna, D O N N A

D. S. Leslie, née C. R. Guttman
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Skype: dsleslie
Web: ÞE OL' PHILOSOPHIE SHOPPE
Your Source for Discounted Ideas
http://members.cox.net/dsleslie2/
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Gary Wood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Wednesday, July 05, 2006 12:20 PM
Subject: Advanced Audio Coding


> Hi all!  Since we've been discussing different formats for music, such as 
> MP3 and AAC, I went to Google to find out about advanced audio coding!  It 
> sounds like AAC might be more akin to DVD sound, because it relies on the 
> MPEG2 standards, similar to DVD's.
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