I’m super lazy and can’t be bothered manually converting each one, is there any good tools/sites I can use to convert the whole playlist? I used to use youtube-DLG but it seems to have stopped working.

  • AphoticDev
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    11 year ago

    Why would you want to convert to mp3? This ain’t 2003, there’s way better formats to use than that.

      • AphoticDev
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        31 year ago

        Depends on whether you want lossless or lossy. For lossy, OOG Vorbis is the way to go if you want to support open source. If you don’t care about that, WMA is a proprietary format alternative. Both WMA and Vorbis have better quality than MP3, with equivalent file sizes. I use Vorbis myself, because it’s free.

        If you want lossless, idk, because I don’t fuck with that.

        • SBS1313
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          1 year ago

          Just a small question let us say i wanted to convert all of my mp3 files into oog or wma. Will i loose some quality or it is fine (my files are around 128kbps)??? Because better quality for same size seems like a switch i would do. (I will convert with AIMP)

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            If they’re already MP3 then don’t bother. Can’t make it sound better after it’s already been compressed. You’d need to get source material then convert to whatever format.

            There’s nothing wrong with MP3 though. Hell most people are listening to streaming like Pandora and Spotify and don’t complain.

          • AphoticDev
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            21 year ago

            Vorbis has better compression than MP3, so you won’t lose any quality, and the files should be a little smaller.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      There might be, but as a standard mp3 is by far the most cross compatible format on any device. Plus, if you feel like it later you can just create a program to convert all the mp3 files into other formats.

      • AphoticDev
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        31 year ago

        OOG Vorbis has been around for years, what device are you imagining that can’t play it? A Zune?

        Likely they are putting it on mobile phone, and both major OSes can handle those files.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          My phone will play .ogg with VLC, but the little bar that tracks song progress is broken, same with .opus. .flac works but phone manufacturers have decided I don’t need storage space and I instead need their cloud, which I refuse to use, so .mp3 it is.

          • AphoticDev
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            1 year ago

            If you’re having issues with OOG, then try AAC. It was designed to be the successor to MP3, and when MP3 is phased out in the coming years, it will be in favor of AAC. I use Vorbis because it’s open source, but there are other options than that.