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Who'll Be Using Ogg Vorbis Instead Of MP3?

An anonymous reader asks: "Ogg Vorbis is hitting stable and hopefully will release 1.0 soon. But I'm wondering, who is going to use it? MP3 is very popular on the net and beyond, but it's based on patents. Software patents aren't legal in Europe, but are in other parts of the world. Is Ogg Vorbis making a chance to become the next music-standard for the net and beyond. This mainly because there are no patents broken by this standard. Will it be a standard for the world or one for the books?"

Never having bothered to do it before with MP3, I've recently started ripping my CD collection to .ogg files, and the quality is good to my (tin) ears. Someone with an entrepreneurial bent needs to sell a dedicated hardware player that takes CD-Rs, so I can play back 10 hours of books on tape from a single disk. I'm not the only one slow on the MP3 curve, basically starting from scratch with Vorbis, am I?

14 of 731 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Worst test of the bunch by stripes · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Good point. However, it misses something: food and drink are often comfort products, and sound files are not. Sound codecs can be judged almost rationally. You can compare output waveforms to the original, you can get 'golden ears', etc. and have a meaningful comparison.

    No, you can't compare the waveforms to the original and declare the closest to be the winner. The goal is to get something that sounds the closest to the original, which is not the same as getting the closest waveform (unless one waveform matches). For example you can can omit frequencies that are masked by other frequencies, or alter the timings of others in complex ways and most people won't hear the difference.

    The right test is double blind and to include the sound sample form all codecs plus the original (so you can discard anybody that claims codec X is clearly better then the original, since they aren't listening for reproduction, but for something else, like more bass, or volume or who knows).

    MP3's that sound as good as the original will sound bad to dogs, because we made assumptions about the sound processing people do. they may sound even worse to aliens, then again they'll already be pissed we only do two channels (or 5.1) so their 28 ears will be useless (well, most of them...).

  2. Quality by Logic+Bomb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's sorta obvious, but someone should say it: QUALITY MATTERS. I think that will be the most important determiner. If the quality/size tradeoff is better than MP3, people who matter will have an incentive to switch. The other issue will probably be inclusion of a codec in a very popular player program. This will not happen if "people who matter", i.e. netheads, don't adopt. When this happens, Ogg Vorbis has a shot at hitting the mainstream.

  3. Same problem .wma has: by Rimbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MP3 is -the- format.

    The guy who posted about GIF has a good point. It doesn't matter that the technology behind it has patents; it is the de facto standard. It has oodles of hardware and software support. And most importantly, it's the standard that -customers- want.

    Geeks maybe want Ogg Vorbis. Corporations want .wma, .ram, and other formats with strict support for licensing. But the people with wallets full of green notes and good credit ratings want MP3.

    What's preventing Ogg from taking over MP3 is that Ogg's place in the market is already taken up by MP3. Being first-mover is a strong advantage. Ogg's a long ways behind MP3, and there's really no advantage to it from a consumer's point of view. That's the reason why strictly-controlled music formats aren't competing well with MP3 as well: There is no advantage for the consumer.

    I can acquire, make, and listen to MP3's for free. No cost. There are free encoders, free players, and free MP3's of all kinds everywhere. Why do I need Ogg?

  4. Why isn't it? by TWX_the_Linux_Zealot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd not go that far, the thing with Ogg is that they're trying to make it relatively easy to convert, the XMMS plugin exists, and it should be transparent to the user to play ogg files. Granted, people do need to start encoding to make the codec survive, but I'll admit that I'm willing to give it a chance, especially if it means that I don't have to worry about my music encoder ceasing to release newer, better versions because it got it's ass sued into the ground for being patented...

    --

    IBM had PL/1, with syntax worse than JOSS,
    And everywhere the language went, it was a total loss...
  5. Worst test of the bunch by bee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, and it's been the only test ever that said anything bad about Ogg Vorbis, and it was the worst-administered test of them all too. Any good test will do a double-blind or at least a single-blind test (think: Pepsi Challenge-- how many people would say they preferred Pepsi if they knew it was Pepsi?). This did none of that.

    --
    At least mafia-owned pizzarias make excellent pizza. Compare to Bill Gates.
  6. I think not by Ubi_NL · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's compare this to the old VCR battle
    Both Beta and V2000 were quite a lot better than VHS, but in the end VHS won it. Why? as far as V2000 is concerned you were able to get pr0n on VHS.

    Pretty much the same here (although no pr0n). Joe Sixpack doesn't care about formats, and he doesn't care about money (really) as almost every home user gets his software illegally. But even if he did have to pay for it: Nowadays you can get MP3-walkmans, photocamera's etc etc. Nothing is there for Ogg Vorbis.
    To make OV popular, you'll need to give it an advantage over MP3, that can be understood by Joe. Patents and 'free (as in speech) software' are no such things.
    At the moment MP3 has all the advantages, and there's no reason why OV will take over.

    --

    If an experiment works, something has gone wrong.
  7. Ogg is not for me by wackybrit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I archive all of my CDs to MP3, and I'll be sticking to MP3 for the foreseeable future. My MP3 encoder is faster than any current Ogg encoder, and IMHO, a Lame VBR mp3 is higher quality than an Ogg file anyway. I'm also planning to get an MP3 CD player in the future for my car. If I had a lot of OGG files, I'd need to decode them and re-encode to MP3 just to put them onto CDR. Not much use. Ogg Vorbis seems to be a good format, but it wasn't first. The fact that there are few strings attached to it is extremely good, and I think Ogg will be very useful for programmers and games developers. But in the consumer market, MP3 was there first, MP3 is already popular.. and it's another VHS versus Betamax.

  8. Re:GIF formatted images by djocyko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    internet explorer views png. I think that takes care of a HUGE chunk of the population, no?

  9. The real question is... by Chester+K · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...why would anyone use Ogg Vorbis instead of MP3, aside from just being part of groupthink?

    Have the software patents affected anyone here personally?

    --

    NO CARRIER
  10. Re:Quality almost never matters by Speare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sad to say, but quality does NOT matter to 90% of the market. Only the experts care.

    If quality mattered, people would use CAV laserdisc in all cases, but the majority uses CLV to put twice the content on each side of the disc.

    If quality mattered, people would use uncompressed laserdisc over dvd, but the majority prefer the small discs at the expense of image integrity.

    If quality mattered, people would use raw or lossless compression on images, but the majority prefer JPG at crappy levels.

    If quality mattered, everyone would record MP3 at 192Kbps, even if it meant two songs fit into your old Rio, but the majority back off the quality to squeeze more music into their player.

    If quality mattered, everyone would buy the best high-performance tires, spark plugs and other car parts, but the majority go for average or no-name automotive suppliers to stretch the paycheck a little farther.

    If quality mattered, we'd have MENSA MEMBERS and ETHICS SPECIALISTS in our elected offices, and we'd pay attention to the legislation that they offered.

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
  11. Worst Music Quality of the Bunch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Was'nt there a Slashdot submission a few weeks ago that rated the audio quality of all the music compression formats?

    Ogg came in last, no?

  12. Re:Killing the myth once again by VivianC · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is straying off topic a bit, but I think it is worth mentioning:

    First off, if you've ever worked with profesional video recording equipment, you will know that Beta has much better sound and picture quality than VHS. Of course, half inch tape is better than beta and that is where you will find your broadcast programs stored.

    Second, I've always heard that it was Sony's licensing problems that killed Beta. Anyone could license the VHS format and produce tapes, players and recorders. Sony kept a tight grip on the Beta format until it was too late.

    Sony seems to suffer from this pretty often. Just look at the memory stick and the Sony PDA. Both good products that are incompatable with everything else. Maybe someday they will learn...

    --
    Viv

    Gmail invites for ip
  13. Change the name! by hyrdra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ogg Vorbis has a real chance of taking MP3, but they're going to have to change the name. Part of MP3's success is its trendy name. It's a smooth name that rolls of the tounge, sounds cool, but not too technical.

    Ogg Vorbis sounds like a new brand of Mr. Clean. It's funny, strange, un-sophisticated and not natural to say. Personally, since both are technically about the same, I would prefer my files with a *.mp3 than *.ogg.

    It's small, but it's something consumers notice. Fashion is just as important as functionality and political freedom.

    --


    "I'll just chip in a bit for RedHat: I actually have that installed on my university machine." - Linus, '95
  14. WRITE TO RIO TO SUPPORT OGG VORBIS! by ukyoCE · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Follow this link to Rio's web page and e-mail them requesting support for Ogg Vorbis. Personally this is the only thing holding me back from buying a compressed-audio cd player. The first one that comes out supporting .ogg will have me reripping all of my CDs into the supreme .ogg format and purchasing their player, regardless of cost.

    http://www.riohome.com/default.asp?menu=support&su bmenu=cs&item=cs_email-form&detail=other
    That is a link to e-mail Rio requesting that they release an upgrade to their Roivolt to playback .ogg files. Below is the text that I sent to them. With portable support for .ogg, I think it has a great chance of overtaking mp3.


    Rio,
    I'm interested in buying a cd-mp3 player. I think this would be a GREAT way to backup all my cds, as well as make them easier(and funner!) to listen to. I could fit my 100cds on around 10 cds. That's awesome.
    There is only one thing holding me back. MP3 is an aged format, and also requires that related software pay royalties to Frauenhoffer for the mp3 patents. Same with "mp3pro" or whatever their next mp3 is.
    Ogg Vorbis is a free codec which isn't blocked by any patents whatsoever. It also sounds better than mp3, AND takes up less space. I will be ripping all of my cds into .ogg format as soon as their encoder reaches 1.0 (which will be soon). I noticed that the Roivolt has upgradable codecs. If an upgrade is released for the Roivolt to play Ogg Vorbis, the Roivolt will win the hearts of audiophiles and geeks all over.
    Thanks! :)