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#1 (permalink) |
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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The next-gen HD Audio Bitrate Cheat Sheet!
A few I will fill in the blanks later
![]() Some quick terms: Lossy - Some audible information is lost. i.e. rolling off frequencies over 15khz. Perceptually Lossless - No information audible to humans is lost, however waveform visually looks different than the master. i.e. rolling off frequencies over 19khz, because in repeated scientific tests it was proved that humans can't hear sounds higher than 19khz in frequency. Mathematically Lossless - No audible information is lost, waveform looks identical to the master. i.e. entire frequency range intact Bit-resolution/Bit-depth: Wikipedia i.e. 16bit audio. Greater bit-resolution brings greater Signal-to-Noise Ratio. Sampling Rate: Wikipedia i.e. 48khz audio. For our purposes, divide sampling rate in half to get the max frequency response for a given soundtrack. i.e. 48khz sampling rate = up to 24khz frequency response. Most common bitrates/configurations: Dolby Digital Plus (Lossy, though can be Perceptually Lossless at 1.5mbps+ bitrates as per Microsoft) Bitrates: 16bit/48khz 5.1: 640kbps CBR 24bit/48khz 5.1: 1.5mbps CBR 16bit/48khz 7.1: ? 24bit/48khz 7.1: ? Dolby Digital TrueHD (Mathematically Lossless) Bitrates: 16bit/48khz 5.1: 1.5mbps ABR (3.0mbps peak) 24bit/48khz 5.1: 3.4mbps ABR (5.0mbps peak) 16bit/48khz 7.1: 1.9mbps ABR (3.8mbps peak) 24bit/48khz 7.1: 4.7mbps ABR (6.6mbps peak) DTS-HD (Lossy, though can be Perceptually Lossless at 1.5mbps+ bitrates as per DTS) 16bit/48khz 5.1 (Core): 768kbps CBR 24bit/48khz 5.1 (Core): 1.5mbps CBR 24bit/96khz 5.1: 3mbps CBR 16bit/48khz 7.1: ? 24bit/48khz 7.1: ? 24bit/96khz 7.1: ? DTS-HD Master Audio (Mathematically Lossless) 16bit/48khz 5.1: ? 24bit/48khz 5.1: ? 24bit/96khz 5.1: 5.3mbps ABR (6.8mbps peak) 16bit/48khz 7.1: ? 24bit/48khz 7.1: ? 24bit/96khz 7.1: ? PCM (Uncompressed) 16bit/48khz 5.1: 4.6mbps 24bit/48khz 5.1: 6.9mbps 24bit/96khz 5.1: 13.8mbps 16bit/48khz 7.1: 6.1mbps 24bit/48khz 7.1: 9.2mbps 24bit/96khz 7.1: 18.4mbps
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. Last edited by Ruined : 07-01-2007 at 12:27 PM. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Admin Emeritus
Join Date: Aug 1999
Location: Orygun
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I didn't buy this when you posted it before, here. I still don't buy it.
As soon as you talk about modifying the source before the compression happens, then you basically invalidate any serious comparison between compression algorithms, lossy or lossless. |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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Quote:
I completely do not understand the second half of your sentence. For reference, with the MP3 lossy codec, here is a table of the default frequency rolloffs based on bitrate using LAME MP3 encoder: bitrate (kbps), lowpass (hz) 8, 2000 16, 3700 24, 3900 32, 5500 40, 7000 48, 7500 56, 10000 64, 11000 80, 13500 96, 15300 112, 16000 128, 17500 160, 18000 192, 19500 224, 20000 256, 20500 320, 21000 And, Dolby Digital 5.1: bitrate (kbps), lowpass (hz) 384, 18000 448, 20000 Finally, DTS 5.1: bitrate (kbps), lowpass (hz) 768, 19000 1536, none So if you were use LAME to encode an MP3 at 128kbps, the first thing it would do is rolloff all frequencies above 17.5khz. If it did NOT do any rolloff at 128kbps, say, the result would sound horrible because there is not enough bitrate there to sustain the full frequency range. You'd get full response up to 22hz, but it would be horribly mangled by artifacts (you can test this yourself with commandline parameters). Since those artifacts are much more noticable than the lack of frequencies greater than 17.5khz, the latter is the obvious choice to make. With higher bitrates like 192kbps, we get into territory where the frequencies thrown away do not matter because we can't hear them anyway. Rereading the second part of your sentence again, I'm not sure you realize that with virtually every lossy encoder known to man the "source" is "modified" pre-compression via a lowpass filter by the encoder, yes (sometimes other techniques, too).
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. Last edited by Ruined : 07-02-2007 at 04:05 AM. |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Admin Emeritus
Join Date: Aug 1999
Location: Orygun
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Anyway, my point is you define terms at the beginning of your post, but I don't think those defintions are too accurate. To say "Lossy - Some audible information is lost. i.e. rolling off frequencies over 15khz." doesn't really get to the heart of what lossy encoding is. "Perceptually lossless" vs. "Mathematically lossless" seems to me to be an attempt at promoting some kind of adgenda regarding these formats. Lastly, do you have links to any of these scientific studies that prove humans can't hear above 19k? I've never heard that before. (No pun intended. ) From what I've learned from music production, I can tell you that there is a lot more we don't know about psychoacoustics, than what we do know. (Both at the high and low frequency ranges.) |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Actor
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: canada
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Not quite sure what to make of this thread. Interesting to see the comparative bit rates & such regarding 5.1 & 7.1 lossy & lossless though other than that, everything else is ones opinion over another in terms of what is actually heard.
Sinse I did hear a difference between 2 lossless tracks (16bit/48khz 5.1: 1.5mbps ABR (3.0mbps peak)) & (16bit/48khz 5.1: 4.6mbps) on the same title this statement is void, Mathematically Lossless - No audible information is lost, waveform looks identical to the master. i.e. entire frequency range intact
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DVD, HD DVD & BD Collection Finished supporting High-Def. Time for Blu to go mainstream. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Actor
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: "Vyenna", VA
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I know for sure that video-wise, I can't always see the imperfections that others see. For example, dugpa finds compressions artifacts all over movies that I just don't see problems with. But with audio, I am much more picky. It has been my main criticism for hd-dvd, which is that from an audio perspective, it is weaker. While colors are often more bright, the PQ really isn't heads above bd. However, bd blows hd-dvd out of the water in the audio department. Hands down, no contest.
The bit rates data is interesting to see though. I'm just not sure how it helps the argument that lossy is better than lossless.
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HOOK'EM!!! UT LONGHORNS - National Champs 2005-2006!!! http://ganthc.youaremighty.com |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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Therefore, if you heard a difference, it is due to one of the following: 1) The mix/master used for the TrueHD and PCM sources was different. 2) One of the soundtracks plays back by default at a louder volume due to Dialog Normalization, and humans tend to associate louder volumes with being better sounding. 3) Somewhere in your processing chain one of the decoders/processors is doing a better job on one soundtrack vs. the other. 4) Placebo effect.
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. |
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#9 (permalink) | ||||
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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Quote:
Perceptually lossless, though, is something that can be achieved by lossy encoders at high bitrates. It means that some information was thrown away from the original signal, but the information thrown away was inaudible and thus is not really "lost" because it was not able to be heard in the first place. Good MP3 encoders like LAME tend to reach perceptual lossless at around 256kbps, WMA reaches it 192kbps VBR, DD+ and DTS both are claimed to reach it at 1.5mbps. While you are not getting the original information bit-for-bit, you are getting all the information audible to humans bit-for-bit. Hence, it is perceptually lossless but not mathematically lossless. Quote:
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That is where the interesting discussion takes place, and audio engineers appear to be divided on this topic. Quote:
A number of links indicating that we can't hear past 19-20khz: http://everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=812113 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist...mpling_theorem http://www.pcmus.com/digthe.htm#brick http://csunix1.lvc.edu/~snyder/2ch11.html The sampling rate of CD was specifically picked because the frequency range provided by the sampling rate was just above the threshold of human hearing.
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. Last edited by Ruined : 07-02-2007 at 04:42 PM. |
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#10 (permalink) | ||
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#12 (permalink) | |
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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Quote:
![]() Others I've talked with who own iPods are happy with the default sampling rate, which does lend itself to support your example above. I guess the bottom line is it really depends on the sensitivity of the ears of the listener. Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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Admin Emeritus
Join Date: Aug 1999
Location: Orygun
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Just like in the divx days when the terms "Standard DVD" and "Open DVD" were used to try to imply different things about DVD, so too could terms like "mathematically lossless" and "perceptually lossless" be used. Lossless is just lossless. There's no need to qualify it. Just as there is no need to prefer it over the different lossy codecs. They can all do a good job when done well. |
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#14 (permalink) | ||
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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I think a lot of people want lossless audio for "just because" reasons, which is fine, but they attempt to justify their desire with technical debate and then the cookie starts to crumble. Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#15 (permalink) |
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Actor
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: "Vyenna", VA
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And I think that Taxi has said that the human ear and hearing is not something that necessarily fits neatly into the techno-jargon bit rate schema. Every individual would probably have different hearing abilities, much like fingerprints. Some people would not be able to discern the difference between CD and itunes downloads. I certainly can. Some people can't pick out an oboe from an orchestra playing either. But to blanket say that DD+ 1.5mbps is equal to lossless is false. True, we don't have comparisons from the same source, but from what I have heard of them, lossless still sounds better, more robust, and has a better immersion of sound.
Audio equipment and setups can also play a part in this. All I am saying is that with my setup, equipment, and hearing, I can't ever say that lossy audio sounds equal to or in the same vicinity as lossless. I'm not saying that lossy sounds like crap. But when you are in a highdef format, I want the best sound that goes with the best picture. And it seems that with hd-dvd, they aren't delivering the best sound possible 8 times out of 10. The sound is good, but it's not the best.
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HOOK'EM!!! UT LONGHORNS - National Champs 2005-2006!!! http://ganthc.youaremighty.com |
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#16 (permalink) | |||
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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So in conclusion, the debate is if in fact DD+ 1.5mbps is perceptually lossless as claimed, are you not getting the same or better audio quality in less space/bandwidth - which can be used for interactive extras, additional soundtracks, higher video bitrate, or other features? Anyway, it is quite an interesting discussion and there appears to be no definite answer to it. P.S. - You can also use imaging to help with this association. With Photoshop, when you save your image in the lossy format JPEG, you can pick varying levels of compression. If you set it to maximum quality, usually you can't tell the difference between the source and the JPEG. You still aren't getting the original, but you are getting enough visual data that it looks the same as the original. With lossy audio encoders, its a similar situation.
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. |
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#17 (permalink) | ||||
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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![]() Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Official Forum Warmonger
"Dial Tone" Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hayward, CA, USA
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Quote:
![]() It's not the bits that are in the audio that's important, it's how the audio sounds after reproduction by our A/V gear that's important. When you hear a great audio track you comment on how good or great the audio sounds and don't comment on how happy you are all those bits are present. Comments like, "Wow, that kicked my ass!" apply solely to how the audio sounds pure and simple. I think it would be great to head over to Dolby Labs and do some audio tests between DD+, Dolby TrueHD, and LPCM audio. Peace...
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My DVD Aficionado List "At last we shall reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we shall have revenge!" |
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#19 (permalink) | |
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It's Good to Play Together
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: NJ, USA
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Quote:
No tests have been done with DD+ AFAIK due to the newness of the codec combined with the lack of access to encoding tools and the fact that we are just now getting access to uncompressed/lossless 5.1 masters. My guess, though, is that you will see the same thing with DD+ as you do with other "lossy" codecs - at some point, you reach a state of "perceptual lossless" sound, which is claimed to be 1.5mbps for DD+. Believe me, I understand the fascination with lossless audio. I was in the process of archiving my CDs with lossless WMA. Now I'm having second thoughts. Why waste all that space with 50-60mb files when its proven 6-7mb files sound the same? Those bigger files mean that I need a clunkier MP3 player since 8gb won't cut it for a library of lossless files. Not to mention the smaller files are much more portable.
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For every shadow, no matter how deep, is threatened by morning light. Last edited by Ruined : 07-02-2007 at 08:42 PM. |
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#20 (permalink) | |
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Admin Emeritus
Join Date: Aug 1999
Location: Orygun
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Quote:
) Lossy isn't lossless. If you want to say the the audio is "perceptually identical" to lossless, that is one thing. But "perceptually lossless" sounds like more of a political statement to me, and therefore I distrust its use. (Maybe I should substitutle "political" with "marketing". Equal distrust there on my part.) I think that people (not Ruined in particular) who use "perceptionally lossless" are trying to avoid saying "perceptually identical" because they believe that claim is harder to support.Maybe it *is* time to call the folks at Audio F/X. Seamonkey? Are you up for it? ![]() |
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