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I see many albums are titled "Mastered for iTunes"
Is there any difference in sound between them and the normal albums on itunes?
The iTunes catalog was initially offered in 2003 as 128 kbps AAC files, many of which
were encoded from the original CD masters. They sounded great—in fact, these
downloads led the industry in sound quality. More than 100 million songs were sold in
this format in a little over a year, changing the landscape of legal digital music forever.
You've just got to love the Apple marketing spin sometimes.
I see some artists are missing on iTunes store like Def Leppard.
My memory is failing me - what other legit online music stores were there in 2003 when iTS launched?
And they covered that in the next para, I guess you missed it…Has nothing to do with legit or not and everything with putting spin audio quality which today nobody would touch with a barge pole.
So yeah, back in 2003 I think Apple did lead the industry with their 128 kbps AAC files - if they didn't tell me who did?But innovation didn’t stop there. Recently, using the most advanced AAC encoder, the iTunes catalog was upgraded to iTunes Plus: a variable bit rate (VBR) 256 kbps AAC encoding format. iTunes AAC encoders are now able to transparently encode high definition audio, creating files that retain the small footprint, portability, and ease of use iTunes is known for. And they sound amazing.
And they covered that in the next para, I guess you missed it… So yeah, back in 2003 I think Apple did lead the industry with their 128 kbps AAC files - if they didn't tell me who did?
Apple is specifically referring to the industry - you highlighted that yourself.Home users and the internet ripping them at 320kbps![]()
NB - your emphasis, not mine.morkhans said:You've just got to love the Apple marketing spin sometimes.
The iTunes catalog was initially offered in 2003 as 128 kbps AAC files, many of which
were encoded from the original CD masters. They sounded great—in fact, these
downloads led the industry in sound quality. More than 100 million songs were sold in
this format in a little over a year, changing the landscape of legal digital music forever.
Apple is specifically referring to the industry - you highlighted that yourself.
NB - your emphasis, not mine.
So I bought music from SA store used to buy from US store but the exchange rate sucks.
Anyway I was looking for Eminem's songs but "clean" versions and I see US store has them, not SA.
I also came across the Kenyan store and see for the same Eminem songs that cost $1.29 on US store cost $0.49 on Kenyan Store?
Home users and the internet ripping them at 320kbps![]()