evandixon Posted April 14, 2009 Posted April 14, 2009 I have determinded the problem. When the DSi says that it is compatible with AAC files, it does not mean *.aac files. iTunes will convert MP3 and other formats to DSi compatible files.
AtomicGreymon Posted April 15, 2009 Posted April 15, 2009 AAC audio can come in any number of container formats... I wouldn't recommend converting it from MP3 or other lossy formats, though. If possible, create your files from the original CDs, or a lossless source file (*.wav, etc.).
HottSushiz Posted April 15, 2009 Posted April 15, 2009 Random Fact, AAC format is actually a better quality format then MP3, it's just not that common, or popular.
AtomicGreymon Posted April 15, 2009 Posted April 15, 2009 Well, I'm not sure how uncommon/unpopular it is these days, thanks to it being the primary format used by Apple; and the default choice when ripping an audio CD in iTunes. But yeah, it is supposed to be higher quality at a given bitrate than MP3... provided you don't create the AAC from an MP3 anyway, lol. My digital music collection is encoded in AAC, but mostly because it's convenient. My preference for video encoding is definitely H.264, which is part of the same general specification as AAC audio. MPEG-4, as a whole, does tend to be pretty nice.
damio Posted April 16, 2009 Posted April 16, 2009 Well, I'm not sure how uncommon/unpopular it is these days, thanks to it being the primary format used by Apple; and the default choice when ripping an audio CD in iTunes.But yeah, it is supposed to be higher quality at a given bitrate than MP3... provided you don't create the AAC from an MP3 anyway, lol. My digital music collection is encoded in AAC, but mostly because it's convenient. My preference for video encoding is definitely H.264, which is part of the same general specification as AAC audio. MPEG-4, as a whole, does tend to be pretty nice. Ever heard of FLAC? I have some music in flac, some at high bitrate MP3, purely because MP3 has the widest compatibility between devices, and flac has great quality (I use mediamonkey anyway, so i dont have to deal with the compatibility of flac.
evandixon Posted April 16, 2009 Author Posted April 16, 2009 (edited) I looked in the instruction manual, and it only inconspicuoisly mentioned AAC files. It didn't say anything about extensions. Edited March 29, 2013 by evandixon typo
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now