How MP3 Was Born
Actual Reality points us to an interview in BusinessWeek.com with the man most often cited as the inventor of the MP3 format — though Karlheinz Brandenburg credits many for the development, including in particular Suzanne Vega.
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Yes, but FreeBSD girls rule!.
-- Patent no.123456: A way to personalize
FLAC is losslessly compressed, mp3 is lossily compressed. You can get down to about 50% of the original filesize with FLAC; with mp3 the limits are whatever you'll tolerate down to something ridiculously crappy (16kbps or something I think is the minimum?).
So FLAC is for when you care about quality over file size. It also isn't nearly as supported as mp3.
dupe
Real life is overrated.
Really short explanation: FLAC is like Winzip for .wav files.
.wav demands. This way, you still have the originals - well, at least more "original" if the CD is scratched or stolen or destroyed. It's not even an esoteric audiophile reason; it's just that it works well for archiving (which in turn begs the question why you want to archive something on a portable player that faces risk every day, but hey).
:).
Longer explanation: Why you want to do this? You want the originals on your harddisk without bothering about ISO files which you'd have to mount first using Daemon Tools or something (which means you can't play 'm back directly). You don't want the completely ludicrous space requirements
As usual, Wikipedia has a page on the subject
They were never valid anyway in the EU or the UK, since MP3 encoding is a mathematical operation and beyond the scope of patentability in those jurisdictions.
Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
No! It doesn't beg the question! It RAISES the question!