You can use many compressed formats for good or even transparent quality. What formats and how is a long story and I am not going to write it here. I will only describe what I have decided to do.
I have nearly 20000 music files in my collection; some are old, some recently ripped. The old ones are in high quality VBR MP3 format. Recently I started to rip to Monkey's Audio format. But now I think it uses too much hard drive space in everyday use (including backups). Files are also too big for using with Media Server (I have a 4 Mbit connection to my office and seeking large APE files is not working very well).
Now I have decided to do next: I rip to Monkey's Audio, scan cover art images and tag the files. Then I convert the APE files to Ogg Vorbis format and leave only the OGG files in the library. I archive the APE files to CDR or DVDR disks for later use.
I use the newest v.1.1.0 Vorbis encoder. I have replaced the older encoder (oggenc.exe) in the MC plugins folder with it.
I have this setting in MC encoding options (Encoding Type & Quality, Encoder: Ogg Vorbis, Quality: Custom -> Advanced):
-q9 --advanced-encode-option impulse_noisetune=-15The setting makes quite big variable bitrate files, averaging about 270-370 kbps (depending on the source material). For me the files are transparent. I really can't here any difference with the original CD. (I have an audiophile soundcard and I play my music through a high quality separate amp and speakers). Those files have also enough quality for transcoding to 192 kbps MP3 for car and portable use.
Vorbis encoder from www.rarewares.org.Oggenc2.3 using libVorbis 1.1.0 with IMPULSE_TRIGGER_PROFILE Option 2004-09-24, ICL 7.1 compiles:
Pentium 3 / AMD (270Kb) Pentium 4 only (260Kb) Technical information about encoding formats and quality:
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