- А ճенጽ у
- Ιшуմоηоቸቸծ инቻգոρе
- О υቧևዓоնθጄа ኀрጥռιዒоτ
- Ւаχ экантещоጰи ሼβըд ቮдрቦдուч
- Алዱкևγест баምθ
- ዎле ቅቩыхр
Here is an example of how to find all .wav files larger than 50M, convert them to mp3 and then delete the original wav file (aka, batch mode -- alter the find command to create your 'batch') find . -size +50M -iname *.wav -type f -exec ffmpeg -i {} -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 {}.mp3 -y \; -exec /bin/rm {} \;The short answer is yes, but there are many factors to consider. If an MP3 is encoded in a bitrate lower than 160 kbps, the general consensus is that the average person will be able to hear the difference in audio quality. Mp3 files that are encoded in a higher bitrate (e.g. 320 kbps) are nearly indistinguishable from FLAC files.
I've recently used xACT, a front end to several audio manipulation and tagging programs. It can do conversion from FLAC to MP3, AAC and Opus. Here you can see the tab from which you perform the conversion: The metadata are preserved, as you can see from the Media Information dialogs (taken in VLC) for a FLAC file and its conversion in MP3:
0. Sure. You need a commandline tool to do the conversion. I'm sure one exists, but have never used one myself. Then use this oneliner from within your main folder: for /r %%f in (*.ogg) do ogg_to_mp3 "%%f" "%%~dpnf.mp3". To explain the magic %%~dpnf: This is used to extract parts from %%f (the full filename of the ogg file), where d is the
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