STEAM GROUP
Rotational Velocidensity Awareness RVAwareness
STEAM GROUP
Rotational Velocidensity Awareness RVAwareness
7
IN-GAME
61
ONLINE
Founded
24 August, 2012
Language
English
13 Comments
Cursed-Cat 15 Nov, 2024 @ 2:33am 
Guys, I left my FLAC album slightly opened in the basement.
Thought that it was gonna be fine, but after checking it years later. I noticed that kilobit mold started to grow on it, which makes small sections of my songs sound a bit noisy.
Is it still good to use, or do I have to get a new album?

Any help regarding this would be appreciated.
linda420 21 Oct, 2022 @ 11:00am 
snake oil
I remain the same. 17 Jan, 2018 @ 6:58pm 
rotational velocidensity ...
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:43pm 
actually, the man knows what he's talking about, albeit, petty or nonsense to most people. when i've gone back to some really old mp3's from way back 'in-the-day' (90's, Napster, 56k modem) most of my mp3 library sounds like crap, mostly due to the technologies available at the time. i notice an unusually large amount of "pops" in a lot of songs and a 128k rip sounds more flat than a new 128k rip (both sound terrible regardless). anybody who knows how data is written to a disc would know that bits do get lost over time.
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:43pm 
i'm an arrogant, elitist, analog snob with 2 vintage hifi systems (1 solid state/1 tube based) that can expose every imperfection in an mp3 file. it absolutely cracks me up when people think their crappy OEM soundcard, crappy best buy cables, and crappy desktop speakers are suitable benchmarks for judging sound quality.
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:43pm 
it's pathetic how nowadays people have allowed themselves to compromise quality over convenience and cost. i'm only 34 but just as bitter and scornful as someone twice my age. just wait until i get my FLAC vinyl rip blog up and running!
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:42pm 
I have a PhD in Digital Music Conservation from the University of Florida. I have to stress that the phenomenon known as "digital dust" is the real problem regarding conservation of music, and any other type of digital file. Digital files are stored in digital filing cabinets called "directories" which are prone to "digital dust" - slight bit alterations that happen now or then. Now, admittedly, in its ideal, pristine condition, a piece of musical work encoded in FLAC format contains more information than the same piece encoded in MP3, however, as the FLAC file is bigger, it accumulates, in fact, MORE digital dust than the MP3 file. Now you might say that the density of dust is the same. That would be a naive view.
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:42pm 
Since MP3 files are smaller, they can be much more easily stacked together and held in "drawers" called archive files (Zip, Rar, Lha, etc.) ; in such a configuration, their surface-to-volume ratio is minimized. Thus, they accumulate LESS digital dust and thus decay at a much slower rate than FLACs. All this is well-known in academia, alas the ignorant hordes just think that because it's bigger, it must be better.
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:42pm 
So over the past months there's been some discussion about the merits of lossy compression and the rotational velocidensity issue. I'm an audiophile myself and posses a vast collection of uncompressed audio files, but I do want to assure the casual low-bitrate users that their music library is quite safe.
happy birthday me 31 Oct, 2016 @ 1:42pm 
Being an audio engineer for over 21 years, I'm going to let you in on a little secret. While rotational velocidensity is indeed responsible for some deterioration of an unanchored file, there's a simple way of preventing this. Better still, there have been some reported cases of damaged files repairing themselves, although marginally so (about 1.7 percent for the .ogg format).
Mekia 23 Jan, 2016 @ 1:06am 
flac
PREGNANT ISRAEL THANOS 9 Feb, 2014 @ 6:55pm 
5tgh
Wyman 1 Jul, 2013 @ 6:30pm 
First