Steven P. Ulrick wrote: > On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 12:01:49 +0930 > Tim <ignored_mailbox@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Sat, 2006-10-14 at 16:07 -0500, Steven P. Ulrick wrote: >>> You could also do something like this: >>> cat *.mp3 > filename.mp3 >> I'm curious as to what would happen if you tried that with files that >> were encoded with different rates. > > Hello, Tim > I need to get to bed now, but I must admit that that sounds like an > interesting idea..... I'll try it tomorrow and see what happens :) > > OK, I couldn't wait: I decoded the four files I used in my test earlier > into wav files. I then encoded them at 96, 160, 256 and 320kbs. > Before I encoded them at different bitrates, they totaled 17 minutes > and 6 seconds. I then ran "cat *.mp3 > filename.mp3 on the four > files. I then proceeded to open up the new file in XMMS, and it > detected it as being over 40 minutes long :) I then proceeded to skip > to the parts where the songs were supposed to fade out, and guess > what? Even though it was a live album, the songs flowed together > perfectly. It was kind of funny watching the bitrate indicator in XMMS > change when the song changed. K3B correctly detected the length of the > file. > > Have a Great Night, > Steven P. Ulrick > this all also works with ogg vorbis files. -a -- Anthony - http://messinet.com - http://messinet.com/~amessina/gallery 8F89 5E72 8DF0 BCF0 10BE 9967 92DC 35DC B001 4A4E
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