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6 votes
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The day the music burned - The 2008 Universal fire was the biggest disaster in the history of the music business — and almost nobody knew
16 votes -
Archivists race to digitize slavery records before the history is lost
9 votes -
For sale: This massive, obsessive and (probably) obsolete VHS boxing archive
7 votes -
Oops! Famously scathing reviews of classic books from The Times’s archive
8 votes -
I'm downsizing my digital life. Do you listen to a lot of music? How do you archive it?
I'm downsizing my digital life. I deleted my account on reddit, on another phpbb forum and i don't have instagram/facebook apps anymore. This subject got me thinking about my music. I grab/buy...
I'm downsizing my digital life. I deleted my account on reddit, on another phpbb forum and i don't have instagram/facebook apps anymore.
This subject got me thinking about my music.
I grab/buy albums in mp3 and i have so many that it's impossible to listen to everything. I don't pay for any service like spotify because i don't like. I prefer to download and/or buy in places like bandcamp where i can download the album.
I started reading about other codecs like flac and opus. The availability of albums in flac are way less than mp3 and it's a lossless format. If i focus on it i will be forced to downsize my music library.
The problem is disk space in my smartphone. I'm not an audiophile so i'm not able to hear the difference between flac and 320kpbs mp3. This is where opus enters. This codec gives half the size with better quality than mp3. Soundcloud uses it. A 96kbps opus is the same quality as 320kbps mp3.
Now that Android can play opus i don't see a reason to keep using mp3. The downside is converting flac files every time i want to put on my phone.
I could just convert flac to opus and just live with opus everywhere, freeing a lot of space. But i think keeping flac files is better for archiving because it's lossless. If opus for some reason disappears, i'll have a lossy format and would have convert to another one losing more quality.
How do you deal with music?
26 votes -
To save the sound of a Stradivarius, a whole city must keep quiet
13 votes -
The Art Institute of Chicago has put 50,000 (+) high-res images from their collection online
12 votes -
The Library of Congress lets you stream hundreds of free films
12 votes -
Flashpoint, the flash game archival project, hits version five with a new Linux-supported client
21 votes -
Meet the guy tasked with archiving Prince’s entire vault
12 votes -
Adobe Flash’s gaming legacy — thousands upon thousands of titles — and my efforts to save it
10 votes -
Grandad leaves behind treasure trove of 80,000 records, believed to be Australia's biggest collection
7 votes -
Seventy long-lost Japanese video games have been discovered in a 67GB folder of ROMs on a private forum
12 votes -
Computer History Museum makes the Eudora email client source code available to the public
6 votes -
Adobe Flash’s gaming legacy — thousands upon thousands of titles — and my efforts to save it
6 votes