The MP3 Is Officially Dead, According To Its Creators
May 11, 2017 12:25  PM ET
Andrew Flanagan.
A 2003 display for the iTunes Music Store ushers in  a new age for the 
music business, shortly after its introduction. The iPod  helped turn around 
Apple's fortunes and brand identity, while the creators of  the MP3 had 
regarded a portable player as a mere storage device.
"The death  of the MP3 was announced in a conference room in Erlangen, 
Germany, in the  spring of 1995."
So opens Stephen Witt's How Music Got Free, an investigation  into the 
forced digitization and subsequent decimation of the music business,  from 
which 
it has only very recently started to recover. That ironic conference  room 
eulogy actually took place just before the compression algorithm caught on  
(don't worry, we'll explain in a bit). Soon, the MP3 not only upended the  
recording industry but, thanks to the iPod, also contributed to Apple's  
late-'90s transformation into one of the most successful companies in history.  
(On Tuesday, the tech giant passed $800 billion in market capitalization, 
the  first U.S. company to do so.)
But now, 22 years later, the MP3 truly is dead,  according to the people 
who invented it. The Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated  Circuits, a division 
of the state-funded German research institution that  bankrolled the MP3's 
development in the late '80s, recently announced that its  "licensing 
program for certain MP3 related patents and software of Technicolor  and 
Fraunhofer IIS has been terminated."
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The MP3: A History  Of Innovation And Betrayal
The Record 
The MP3: A History Of  Innovation And Betrayal
Bernhard Grill, director of that Fraunhofer division  and one of the 
principals in the development of the MP3, told NPR over email  that another 
audio 
format, AAC — or "Advanced Audio Coding," which his  organization also 
helped create — is now the "de facto standard for music  download and videos on 
mobile phones." He said AAC is "more efficient than MP3  and offers a lot 
more functionality."
As Witt illustrates throughout his  excellent opening chapters, the MP3, 
before upending the musical world as we  knew it, almost died in the research 
lab. The team of engineers that invented  the format was attempting to make 
it possible to send audio over telephone  lines, which could only transmit 
small amounts of data. Fraunhofer — in  competing for the legitimacy it 
needed to persuade tech companies to actually  use MP3s, and so actually make 
money — hit numerous speed bumps. It was  repeatedly beleaguered by clever 
corporate sabotage and later by piracy. Other  failures hinged on the need for 
the world to catch up with the technology's  possibilities: Along the way, 
one computer engineer on the team had a patent for  a music streaming service 
denied by the German government because it was  technologically absurd at 
the time. Another innovation the team failed to  leverage? The portable MP3 
player.
In early 1995, the format was on life  support, with one licensing deal 
being the use of the technology by hockey  arenas across the U.S. (That spring 
meeting in which the MP3 was declared dead  came months later, after another 
failed pitch that denied it being standardized  and widely adopted.) A 
little later, Fraunhofer began giving away the software  that consumers needed 
to turn compact discs into MP3s at home. The rest is  recent history.
So is it the end of an era? We may still use MP3s, but when  the people who 
spent the better part of a decade creating it say the jig is up,  we should 
probably start paying attention. AAC is indeed much better — it's the  
default setting for bringing CDs into iTunes now — and other formats are even  
better than it, though they also take up mountains of space on our hard  
drives.
And it's not just that more efficient and complete ways of storing  music 
have been developed. There was a deeper problem. The engineers who  developed 
the MP3 were working with incomplete information about how our brains  
process sonic information, and so the MP3 itself was working on false  
assumptions about how holistically we hear. As psychoacoustic research has  
evolved, 
so has the technology that we use to listen. New audio formats and  
products, with richer information and that better address mobile music  
streaming, 
are arriving.
Deezer, a music streaming company relatively popular  in its native France, 
launched in the U.S. offering "high-resolution" streaming,  for double the 
price of a Spotify account. Tidal did the same. Neil Young tried  his hand 
with the hotly tipped Pono. While all three are not exactly taking over  the 
world — Pono, in fact, is officially dead, rebranded "Xstream" — the record 
 business has put its stamp of approval on the idea, at least. "Master 
Quality  Authenticated" is a promising new technology that uses a type of audio 
origami  to spare cellular data when necessary and to "bloom" in quality 
when it's not —  though it has drawn pointed criticism for being a closed loop 
that allows for  recording industry cash-ins. It wouldn't be the first time.
The formats that  convey art and media to us also delineate that media; 
vinyl records require a  session-interrupting flip, which The Beatles 
brilliantly exploited by creating  an infinite loop of gibberish at the end of 
Sgt. 
Pepper's second side. The VHS  tape in both image and sound was as soft and 
fuzzy as a worn teddy bear, while  new high-definition televisions render 
images perhaps too robotically, tracking  movement like T-1000. The MP3, as 
mentioned, enabled millions or billions of  song listens, just with incorrect 
biological assumptions. The lesson seems to  be, simply, that our media will 
always be as exactly imperfect as we  are.


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ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

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