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AVS Audio Converter
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Note from the author: I originally posted this article well over a
year ago but most of it is still relevant today. There are some changes
that have appeared since then and I would like to point them out.
- Online music as a whole seems to be moving towards the rental/lease method.
This is evidence in companies such as Verizon switching to the Rhapsody service.
- Other download sites have started to drop the copy protection scemes as
evidenced by Walmarts move to standard unprotected MP3's. as a matter of fact
this album caught my eye while I was there checking on this. I love
"Unidentified Flying Tuna Trot".
- Since writting this article I have purchased and now use the AVS4YOU package, so
audio conversion for me is done with the AVS Audio Converter. A trial
download will be linked at the top of the page if you would like to look it
over.
- The links should all still be good, but let me know if there are any that are
dated or invalid.
Avoiding the pitfalls of Digital Music and
Download Services
by Lee Brannon
Re-posted Feb 7 2009
Those of you
who are already deep into digital music will most likely skip this page as “old
hat”, but I do have some good advice to offer and I clearly want to get a
message out to those who scoff at the industries attempts to curtail theft.
I am somewhat of a late bloomer when it comes to digital media. I personally
never bought into CD based music much and I had not given digital music a second
look. A recent sentimentality concerning nostalgic 70’s music combined with an
interest in placing ring tones on my cell phone has swayed me to look at the
options.
Nearly everyone is turning to online digital media. Online music is clearly the
way to go and as bandwidth increases and compression software gets better online
video will become just as practical in the near future.
There is no question that picking and choosing your favorite songs is a
blessing. Gone are the days of buying an entire album to get a single song that
you really like. Adding them to your digital player, phone or PDA is what makes
it truly great. However, many people do not realize some of the additional
benefits.
With the low overhead of creating and delivering Digital music there are other
benefits you may not be aware of. Let’s say, your grandfather use to sing a song
that you loved as a child. The song was originally not very popular and recently
it became very hard to find. The cost of reproducing the poorly selling album or
CD it was on had forced the production company to stop making it. You have
searched and searched and you simply can’t find it. Presto, now it’s available
in a digital download format.
Don’t Steal Music.
I have personally heard several people spout off about the high cost of music.
With all the options and at an average of $0.99 a song there simply is no
excuse.
There are plenty of web sites and blogs arguing and counter arguing the points
concerning the justification of music sharing and theft. I won’t go into a long
diatribe about it. Just my own short two cents: Although digital music has put a
damper on media production it is nothing like the effect that theft has had.
Music theft has and continues to badly hurt the music industry as a whole. What
many of the people who scoff at the laws and protest and preach to justify their
theft and illegal sharing of music fail to realize is that the harm done to the
music industry is not being done to corporate share holders, agents, artist and
the like, it is being done to the average working man. When profits are lost,
production gets cut back. People - real people who depend on a paycheck - lose
work.
Deciding on a format.
The first thing you have to decide on before buying digital music is the format
you are going to use. The most common formats for online digital music are MP3,
WMA, Middi, WAV and an assortment of others.
I won’t spend a lot of time explaining the pro’s and con’s of the various
formats. There are plenty of resources on the web that do a good job of
explaining why one is preferred over another and the history of the whole thing.
Here is a place to look if you want to know the in’s and outs of Music file
formats:
Media Monkey (They sell a media database program and audio format converter )
http://www.mediamonkey.com/mp3-ogg-wma-audio-faq.htm
Let’s keep things simple.
First off, everyone should know that all of the formats mentioned here are lossy
formats or formats that lose data in the compression process. They were created
to lesson the amount of data needed to get a good sound replication. CD
quality audio is superior in every way to any of them, but the file sizes
are simply too large to make downloading and transferring practical.
Some terms you will no doubt run accross:
Lossy -
Data Compression that loses
some quality in order to make smaller files. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lossy_data_compression
Lossless -
Data compression that does
not lose quality. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lossless_data_compression
DRM -
This is the protection
encoding created by Microsoft. Nearly all of the downloaded music from
legitimate sites use some form of this. For more on DRM check out
http://www.microsoft.com/security/glossary.mspx#digital_rights_management
and
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-drm.htm and
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6337781.stm
These audio formats
are ways of compressing the data. Some quality is lost and even though the files
are converted to CD Audio format when you burn them to CD that quality lose
remains.
I will tell you right off the bat that I do not have a fine enough ear to tell
the difference between an MP3 and a WMA file. These two formats are what most
people are going to want. There is a third that seems to be gaining ground. It
is called OGG, but I don’t have any experience with it yet.
So what is the difference between MP3 and WMA? Basically MP3 is a major
standard, and the term is so familiar that it is now being used as a generic
term when talking about digital music devices. Much like Coke is used to mean
soda. The problem with MP3 is that it has been around over a decade and the
compression format is not as good as WMA. WMA is as good or better as MP3 but
takes less space.
Windows Media Player comes with every Windows PC and WMA is the format it uses.
Obviously a standard.
Sometimes however you need one of those
other formats.
For example, my Telephone will play only WMA files from internal memory. It will
do MP3 if you have a memory card installed. In addition, the ringtones have to
be MIDI. (One device, three music formats.) My PDA, a Palm Zire 72 requires
RealPlayer to play music, so I have to have my music in Real Audio format or
RealPlayer Music Store tracks (.rax).
For me the decision was simple, since I need 3 or more formats I decided to use
one of the two most common and of those the one with the best compression WMA.
I use an audio converter to change these WMA files into the other formats I
need. There are hundreds of these converters available and some are free. I have
not found one that I want to stick with so I won’t make any particular
recommendations.
As mentioned before Media Monkey offers one that I think I may try soon.
(Update: Works great, but will not work with DRM protected
files.)http://www.mediamonkey.com/download.htm
There is a trial version available on Microsofts site that looks good.
called Acez Audio Converter http://www.micocosoft.com/audio-converter/
I have used a DVD player offered by AVS and I liked very much (Ever lost your
DVD codec files and could not get them back? Well that’s another topic) AVS
offers a product that contains an entire suite of Audio Tools. The trial version
has no limits, but sticks “nags” into things reminding you to buy it.
http://www.avsmedia.com/AudioTools/index.aspx
Update: I have also used the 14 day trial version of Protected Music Converter.
It works very good and does dozens of formats, but the trial copy seems to have
a glitch that is preventing me from doing more than one file at a time.
Don’t like any of
these choices? A Google search on the words “Audio Converter Free” will get over
13,500,000 pages of Free Audio converter info.
So, where to get the music?
There are literally thousands of sites. I am listing some of the most common
ones. Many are gee-Whiz cool, but behind that “want-ta-be-hip” interface stands
a mountain of things you need to check out.
Before picking a site you should pay close attention to a couple of things.
Since cost is not a factor (most charge the same thing) lets look at some things
that do matter.
1) What format will my music download in?
2) Music rental as opposed to purchase and do I have to use a specific player?
3) License issues. Are there restrictions on how I can use the music? (Can I use
it on more than one computer, can I burn it and if so how many times?)
4) Can I move the music to my portable devices? (phone, digital music player,
PDA)
5) Is there good support at the site? (What happens if you download music and it
won’t play?)
What format will my music download in?
I have talked about formats and the fact that you sometimes need a converter,
but you don’t want to have to convert file formats every time you want to listen
to that new song. Take your time. Make a list of devices you want to use the
music on and make sure you know what formats you need/want.
Music rental/subscription as opposed to
purchase.
Many sites have great music rental/subscription programs. Don’t confuse this
with Music sharing. Peer to Peer sharing sites and upload and download swapping
sites should be avoided. I am not a legal expert but I am pretty sure that most
of those sights are operating outside of the law.
Legitimate sites like Yahoo Music will let you pay a fee each month and allow
you to download and play any song in their library. This is also what Napster
ended up doing. Instead of selling you the song, and they do that also, you get
to have any and all of them as long as you pay the monthly fee. At Yahoo it’s
called Y! Music Unlimited and the price is roughly $6.00 a month. This is great
if all you want to do is play music on your computer, but there are some catches
to it. First off, they require that you use their player Yahoo Music Jukebox,
which of course uses a special format for the music. For an extra fee you can
put music onto portable devices, but the number of devices supported is
relatively small. Information about Y! Music Unlimited can be found at
http://music.yahoo.com/ymu/?tab=benefits
License Restrictions:
Nearly all the legitimate music sites place usage or license restrictions on the
digital music. For example most will only let you burn a song to CD 7 times or
copy it to one or two backup computers. Simply put most music sellers use a
special download of a license that is checked against a service or site on the
Internet before allowing you to play, burn or transfer the music. This
precaution is understandable to prevent mass reproduction by thieves and
would-be illegal music production fools. For legitimate users these restrictions
should not be a problem as long as the restrictions are reasonable. If they are
not, don’t buy your music there.
Just make sure you read and understand this before making a purchase.
Portable Devices:
There is not a lot to say here except that this is an important factor. If you
want to play music on your phone, PDA or portable digital device then you need
to know what format that device will accept and find a site that offers music in
that format. Alternately you could find a good converter to change the format of
your purchased music.
Be careful not to get locked into a player that will not talk to your device or
transfer music to it.
Also, If you plan to play most of your music on your portable device like a
phone, you may want to consider getting the music from your service provider.
Verizon, Cingular and most carriers sell downloadable music.
Is there good support at the site?
I recommend that you test it first. I recently bought about 18 songs from a
download site and when I went to play them they were all missing their licenses.
A short phone call later everything was fixed. If the support had not been good
I would have been in trouble.
So, call the support number. Do you get a person? If so, ask them what happens
if you download songs and they don’t play?
Now to shop for music:
Given all of these factors you should now go out and shop for a site. There are
thousands. Again, many are flashy and “hip”, but don’t let that suck you in. You
want easy and fast with good support.
As un-hip as it might seem one of the best places to look at is Wal-Mart. The
selection is somewhat limited compared to others (roughly 500,000 songs) but
nothing I have looked for was missing so far. The files are in WMA format and
they work in Windows Media Player. The songs are cheap. Just $0.88 each. The
order process is simple, the download is smooth and easy. The license agreement
restrictions are more than reasonable.
Note: Wal-Mart does not have a list of portable devices that their DRM downloads
work with. Instead they display a list of what devices they currently sell that
will work with the downloads. I found out the hard way that the files would
transfer to my phone, but not play. (I may add something on how to convert the
files in my Cell phone section)
Here are a few to look at to start you off. Remember there are thousands.
Places to buy Music:
Wal-Mart Music - http://downloads.walmart.com/swap/
Yahoo Music - http://music.yahoo.com/
Music Match (is now Yahoo’s music player/system) - http://www.musicmatch.com/
BuyMusic at Buy.com
http://www.buy.com/buymusic/18250.html
Real Player
http://musicstore.real.com/music_store/home
Microsoft’s Music Site MSN Music
http://music.msn.com/
Unlimited rental / Subscription sites:
Y! Music Unlimited
http://music.yahoo.com/ymu/?tab=benefits
Napster
http://www.napster.com/choose/index.html
Rhapsody
http://offer.rhapsody.com/
I am not so sure about this site. Anyone?
EZ-Tracks - http://www.ez-tracks.com/
Device providers who sell music:
Verizon V-Cast
http://getitnow.vzwshop.com/index.aspx?id=music_vcast
Apple: iTunes Music Store
www.apple.com/itunes/store/
Cingular (Now AT&T)
http://www.wireless.att.com/source/music/cingularmusic.aspx
Guides and comparisons of download
services:
About.com
http://mp3.about.com/od/wheretobuymusic/a/all_profile.htm
Digital Trends
http://reviews.digitaltrends.com/print_guide33.html
C|net’s music Center
http://www.cnet.com/4520-7899_1-6304020-1.html
GizGadMo © 2009 Lee Brannon All rights reserved. ont>