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a strange MP3 related dilemma.
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: detroit,mi,usa
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okay. the beta for music.download.com launched recently, and it fits my needs almost exactly.
50MB of webspace where people can download files.
i have ~48MB of mp3s that i want to upload, theyre all encoded at 128Kbps. the site will only accept files at 192Kbps. if i convert them all in itunes, it increases the file size almost 2x, and all the songs wont be able to fit within their 50MB limit.
i dont really care about quality AT ALL. some of this stuff was recorded on a boombox, some of it came out of the studio sounding too "clean" anyway.
so anyway, how do i convert the 128Kbps files to 192 Kbps without increasing the filesize? i realize this is a really dumb question, and adding data to the file by increasing the Kbps is obviously going to increase the file size, but does anyone have a workaround that might work?
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Rockville, MD
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You might be able to trick them into accepting your files if you paste a 192 kbps frame to the beginning of your 128 kbps files, and you might be able to do that by editing in QuickTime Pro (which saves mov files) and opening that in HexEdit and deleting the mov header, which sometimes leaves just a valid mpeg (1 layer 3) file. Maybe.
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Dedicated MacNNer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Cali
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Force
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Clinically Insane
Join Date: Nov 1999
Location: 888500128, C3, 2nd soft.
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um.
192 kilobits per second means that you will have 192/8 kilobytes per second = 24 KBytes per second of music. That is what this number means. If you manage to reduce the file size below that, your mp3 is, by definition, no longer 192 kbps.
Unless you can change the headers, as someone above suggested, you will have to live with the size increase (which is only 50%, btw.)
The alternative of going variable bit rate with 192 max means that it will reduce the bitrate depending on how much and what is going on audio-wise. If they say 192kbps, though, they probably won't accept 192kbps VBR...
-s*
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Senior User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: united states empire
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Originally posted by scaught:
i realize this is a really dumb question, and adding data to the file by increasing the Kbps is obviously going to increase the file size, but...
there's no 'but', you just answered your own question.
edit: best thing to do, obviously, would be to re-encode from the original source files. however, your question leads me to believe you don't (for some reason) have the originals anymore?
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Finland
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Ok I've sort of found a way to do it, but it requires work on both the sending and the recieving end. Get the Soundhack freeware, first of all. Use Soundhack to change the sample frequency header to make the file shorter. Save from Soundhack ('Save a copy') to create a new AIFF file. Re-encode that to 192. Have the reciever then use Soundhack to edit the header again to make it the correct length (and save).
Obviously this wouldn't do for commercial use, or any situation where ease of use is required...
PS. Yes, I know it's a bad idea, but it's an idea nontheless.
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