On Thu, 22 Feb 2007 13:48:04 -0600
millward <millward(a)ms.umanitoba.ca> wrote:
I've got a sound card capable of 96 bits, (
M-Audio audiofile 24/96 )
but my sound editor, Audacity for Linux, only goes up to 32 bits.
Is there a sound editor for Linux that can do higher than 32 bits?
Maybe I'm missing something here, but what on earth does anyone need
such high resolution for?
ISTR The humble CD is recorded at 18bit. which is over 200,000:1 and
more than 100dB. The orchestral dynamic range is I believe quoted at
90dB. I accept some extra headroom is nice, and the calculations aren't
quite so simple, but even 32bit comes out at mind boggling 200dB.
I don't know about such things in the audio world, but in the world of
color photography, most professional digital equipment uses 48-bit
color. This is way outside the reproduction range of any photo
printing/display technology. But even though a particular 48-bit color
might not be printable or displayable, it is still there. It can be
taken into consideration when doing color adjustments and image filters.
The end result is that when color depth is reduced to the 24-bit color
range that JPG uses - you get better and more accurate color reductions.
So I would think that working in higher bit-depths for audio would
similarly result in better sounding audio when it's reduced to CD format.
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community