Robandcathy wrote:markjhvt wrote:jooprzol wrote:This would be a great feature to have. I just started using subsonic after a short experience with Amazon Cloudplayer, which does not at all support Ogg, flac, etc. I appreciate the transcoding feature to convert ogg files to mp3 format, but there is a noticeable degradation in quality when converting oggs to mp3s for web playback. I do appreciate the direct ogg streaming in the android app, though!
Overall, this is an excellent product, such that I've been advertising it to all of my friends.

One thing that I ran across... if you have your "max bitrate" for the player set to "unlimited", then it looks like lame defaults to 128k for MP3, which isn't very good quality. If you make sure your max bitrate is set to at the very least 192k (320k would be best, of course) - and make sure the lame command line is setup correctly - then you'll get much better quality sound.
I don't want to start a music-format flame war, but a 320k MP3 will provide excellent sound quality for pretty much everything. A 128k MP3, on the other hand (if that's what SubSonic/lame is defaulting to), will sound like crap much of the time.
-Mark-
No point in streaming in 320k if most mp3 are much lower quality than that about 128k, point is to save space, unless you rip in only 320k which I think is over kill. you really must have excellent ears to hear the difference between 128 and 320. while there is a difference it is slight at best, which is why most mp3 are at 128k. Kinda like saying Im going to buy a 250$ hdmi cable because it much better quality then a 40$ one. I promiss you will not see the diffrence unless you use scientific equipment.
While I agree with some of what you're suggesting, I must take issue with a few points. With storage as cheap as it is, space is hardly an issue for most SS users as I would think having multi-TB hard drives is pretty common. You can get a 3 TB drive for $120 nowdays.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6822148844I think the primary issue is really bandwidth for mobile use as 3g signals often drop below 256kbps which can crimp a 320k mp3's style when on the road. The best solution for me is to switch to using ogg transcoding for the Android app which maintains excellent quality for the compression efficiencies it achieves. You can get down around 100kbps and still get quality that's much better than 128k mp3.
On the difference between 128 - 320 quality perception, that's all in the ear of the beholder as anyone who goes to church knows that 90% of the time the person next to you can't sing a 4/4 old fashioned hymn anywhere near in tune. So, yes, most probably can't hear the difference. Unfortunately, I have a son with the gift of perfect pitch that has been playing concert level violin with international touring orchestras, and he isn't out of high school yet. Tell him there's no difference. He is a bit of an exception, granted, but after 13 years of sitting at his weekly lessons, I too suffer from being a bit more perceptive and discriminating when it comes to bitrate quality. I also think there may be something to the genres of music you listen too as well as some music is affected far more by quality than others.
Fortunately one of Subsonic's major strenghts is that it allows each user to customize to their individual tastes and quality needs.