Great discussion with Allan Tépper. He is the host of Beyond Podcasting, as well as a a Pro Audio/Video specialist, tech journalist, broadcaster, author and consultant. (and my previous guest on episode 74)
*DISCLAIMER: We are not advocating for anyone to switch from MP3 to AAC (.m4a). If you're contemplating it, please do more research and decide for yourself.
We discussed many aspects of MP3 vs. AAC (.m4a):Advanced Audio Coding is designed to be the successor of the MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, known as MP3 format, which was specified by ISO/IEC in 11172-3 (MPEG-1 Audio) and 13818-3 (MPEG-2 Audio)
The widespread reluctance to even THINK about publishing podcast episodes in any other format than MP3.
.m4a is the most common extension, but not the only extension, used for AAC.
Sound quality: AAC sounds better than MP3 especially when encoded at lower bitrates. This means that your final episode file can be smaller in size and still sound as good or better than MP3.
Chris's experience: "When I convert my .WAV file to MP3 using iZotope RX 7, the resultant MP3 is 0.4 LUFS lower in volume than the original .WAV. Whereas when I convert to .m4a the resulting LUFS level of the .m4a is exactly the same as the original .WAV file. Interesting..."
Compatibility with ad insertion platforms: Rob Greenlee says, "Hey Chris, Most of the platforms that utilized dynamic ad insertion technology, oftentimes require MP3 files only."
TPES episodes that published in .m4a:
ID3 Tags: Bryan Entzminger says, "I did a test with an episode. I didn’t like that Libsyn didn’t pull the id3 info from the file (because it’s not an MP3) but that’s not a really big deal."
A few popular shows that use .m4a files:
Technical analysis of top podcasts - James Cridland’s post looking at bitrate. LUFS, mono/stereo, etc.: https://podnews.net/article/podcast-analysis?utm_source=podnews.net&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=podnews.net:2019-01-17
AAC's improvements over MP3 (from Wikipedia)Blind tests in the late 1990s showed that AAC demonstrated greater sound quality and transparency than MP3 for files coded at the same bit rate.
Improvements include:
*NOTE: NONE of these lists is exhaustive. We did not investigate every single program in existence ;)
Programs that can encode .m4a files:
Programs that encode MP3s using the Fraunhofer MP3 Encoder algorithm:
Programs for which you can buy an optional Fraunhofer plugin for US$339.15
Programs that DON’T use the Fraunhofer MP3 Encoder algorithm:
Compatibility with players and apps: .m4a files are compatible with all podcast players we could find.
Thanks for sharing so much great info, Allan!
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