this dude deserves a fucking medal
Last edited by sieve on 2011-07-20, 15:36; edited 1 time in total
Implying 1080p matters when looking at a static image.sieve wrote:lost woods @1080p with good headphones blew my mind
The higher the quality it always does something to the audio, it makes it louder or something, nub.patrickfreed wrote:Implying 1080p matters when looking at a static image.sieve wrote:lost woods @1080p with good headphones blew my mind
Absolutely none.GaMerG77 wrote:Hear the video in all the qualities it gives you and hear it, tell me if there is a difference.
He's from DC too, so relateDerek Pangallo, Not selling anything. [Washington, DC]
1 vote by James Kelly
Pixel count isn't related to audio quality, but youtube does compress audio at different levels for different resolutions. This would make more sense if Youtube listed videos as "low", "medium" and "high" instead. Here's the breakdown:
Lower "resolution" videos use the MPEG audio layer in mono at 22050hz, 8kb/s
Higher quality videos are in stereo using AAC audio (mp4a) at 44100hz and a variable bitrate.
Ultimately it's about matching the quality of the audio/video to your available bandwidth.