<blatant plug> KSL currently streams its radio signal over the Internet using Ogg Vorbis. Due to its variable bitrate the quality increases or decreases depending on the user's bandwidth. Pretty nice. I've set it up for only 16 kbps. Good enough for talk radio. I helped set up another radio station in Southern Cal to do streaming audio. They run two separate streams off one server; one at 32 kbps and the other at 96 kbps. The highend sounds better than most 128 kbps MP3 streams. </ blatant plug> KJ
On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 09:51, Wade Preston Shearer wrote: > one of the, if not the, best (currently) digital format for audio > > > On Oct 6, 2003, at 09:47, Mark Gardner wrote: > > > Seeing how this is a list for discovery and learning. What is ogg? > > > > > >> I use CDex to rip my cds to ogg vorbis in windows. Being that I > > discovered > >> this application on the GNUWin II page (a project similar to SSS) I > > assumed > >> there was a linux version. However it appears this is not so. So my > >> question is what program do you use to rip a cd to ogg? > > > > > > > > ____________________ > > BYU Unix Users Group > > http://uug.byu.edu/ > > ___________________________________________________________________ > > List Info: http://uug.byu.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uug-list > > > > > > ____________________ > BYU Unix Users Group > http://uug.byu.edu/ > ___________________________________________________________________ > List Info: http://uug.byu.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uug-list
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