On 8 Jan 2006, wmeler@gmail.com wrote:
Under KDE Control Center, on the Audio CDs selection, I went to Ogg Vorbis Encoder, and see the "Vorbis Quality Setting" which is apparently defaulted to 3.0 under "Quality based" Enconding Method.
The quality scale is from 1 to 10 (including decimals). The closer you get to 10, the closer you get to the original.
Can somebody translate what this 3.0 indicates, and what various settings would mean? In other words, what is 4.0 vs. 5.0 vs. 6.0, etc. in terms of quality? Obviously, if you can quantify, I'd be happy.
The average bitrate for each quality is as follows: q -2 = 32 kbps (in aoTuV beta 4 and above) q -1 = 45 kbps q 0 = 64 kbps q 1 = 80 kbps q 2 = 96 kbps q 3 = 112 kbps q 4 = 128 kbps q 5 = 160 kbps q 6 = 192 kbps q 7 = 224 kbps If you are familiar with lame, the corresponding Ogg Vorbis quality to lame presets are: q 3 = preset medium q 5 = preset standard q 7 = preset extreme For more info, please refer to this page: http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?s=8adde05edf7aef21d90c2b73077f647b&showtopic=15049 Charles -- /* So there I am, in the middle of my `netfilter-is-wonderful' talk in Sydney, and someone asks `What happens if you try to enlarge a 64k packet here?'. I think I said something eloquent like `fuck'. */ linux-2.4.3/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_nat_ftp.c