... even if you're an audiophile, you should also be able to enjoy listening to MP3.
Why? Well, because it's the same principle. DVDs are created from the original film material by applying lossy compression. MP3s are created from the original CDs by applying lossy compression.
Does lossy compression always render the result unusable for serious enjoyment? Well, maybe it depends on the level of compression - and on the quality of the compression method used.
Go to YouTube and watch a movie. Or try to find a 64kbit MP3 sound sample on the internet and listen to it (or listen to the sound of your typical YouTube movie - it will most likely have 64kbit sound at the most). You'll immediately see/hear the effect of the compression.
Then turn on your TV set and put in a good DVD. The same lossy compression is at work ... but do you notice it while watching the DVD? I doubt it.
It's the same with high bitrate MP3s. The files are smaller and contain less information, just like DVDs contain only a fraction of the actual amount of data of the original film material.
Well, what do you say ... do I have a point here?
Edited by Mr ProgFreak - July 03 2009 at 15:46