Rockbox on software decoding platforms (non-Archos) supports playback of eleven lossy codecs (depending on how one counts), five lossless, two uncompressed and twelve miscellaneous formats.This makes a conservative total of 30 supported audio formats, although a few of them do not operate in realtime on all platforms. Extensive work has gone into optimizing each codec, with FLAC, Ogg, WMA, APE, TTA, MPC, Wavpack and WMA Pro among the fastest known integer implementations for those formats.
Lossy formats:
MPEG audio layers I-III (MP3/MP2/MP1)
Ogg Vorbis
MPEG-4 AAC(-LC/HE/HEv2 profiles) (in MP4 or RM containers)
Musepack
AC3 (raw or RM container)
WMA Standard
WMA Professional
Speex
Cook
ATRAC3
Lossless formats:
FLAC
WavPack
Shorten
Apple Lossless
Monkey's Audio
TTA
Uncompressed formats
Intel-style WAV
Apple AIFF
Together they include over a dozen different PCM and ADPCM formats.
Miscellaneous formats
In addition, there are playback of game audio types ADX, SID, NSF, SAP, SPC, AY, GBS, HES, KSS, SGC, VGM, and VGZ. The MOD tracker format, and the Yamaha SMAF are also now supported.
just try it...
press THANKS if i helped you..
Nice one.. Thankxxx..
No problem...
Related
hy all!
anyone tried this codec with aac audio? is the hermes strong enough?
30fps? 384kbit/s?
regards chief
Hi,
I have the information of: http://coreplayer.com/content/view/28/44/
CorePlayerâ„¢ Mobile
Is at the center of the CoreCodecâ„¢ Universe for manipulating multimedia content on your mobile phone, portable media player, PDA, GPS, PC, or convergence device. CorePlayer is designed to be the next-generation multimedia platform as it will extend upon what you thought were limits in playing back multimedia with its simple yet powerful interface and features that is designed to empower our community.
See why the Chicago Suntimes times says that, "it actually has a user interface designed with bipeds in mind."
Technology Bullet points
Available for CE, Pocket PC, Windows Mobile, Smartphone, and Palm (coming soon for Symbian, XP/Vista, Linux and OS X)
Universal skins allows you to create a unique custom user interface exactly how you want it!
Best in Class audio and video decoders like CoreAVC our High Definition H.264 video decoder
CoreTheque media library allows for easy management of your playlists, bookmarks, and databases
Audio
CorePlayer Mobile allows you to enjoy your music with these supported audio formats;
MP3, AAC, MKA, WMA, WAV, OGG, Speex, WAVPACK, FLAC, MPC, AMR, ADPCM, ALaw, MuLaw, Midi*
Video
"It simply works!' Is what we hear from the community and what sets CorePlayer apart from other mobile media players. It support these video formats and containers;
Video: H.264 (AVC), MKV, MPEG-1, MPEG-4 part 2 (ASP), DivX, XviD, WMV*, MJPEG
Containers: Matroska, TS, PS, 3GPP, MOV, AVI, MPEG-4, NSV
MfG
Starbase64
oh, i know that coreplayer works on hermes and that coreplayer supports h264, but my question was: is the hermes with 400MHz able to decode this. and i mean for example a mp4 file, h.264 video and aac audio 128, 30fps, >348kbit/s
Hi, does anybody know how to open an H264-STREAM in Coreplayer Mobile or other application?
if you play with the settings h.264 files (in 320x240 res only) will play fine on my HTC Touch (400mz processor)
I played around with x264 transcoding a while back on my Hermes. It didn't play smoothly for me and I dropped the bitrate to <200kbps. Using the Coreplayer benchmark it came out at around 100% but this didn't provide fully smooth playback.
This was a while ago and the newest Coreplayer maybe more efficient, I will do some more testing and see if things have improved. (my settings were video 200kbps, Audio 24Khz 64kbps 320x240)
After some more testing I can confirm that it doesn't play smoothly on the Hermes. If you are watching material with few scene changes you can get away with it but as soon as any amount of movement is involved then you notice slow downs here and there.
I did a test on a scene with a car chase in it and after benchmarking it I got 98%. This was x264 200kbps, AAC 24Hz 64 kbps. For comparison using exactly the same setting for an Xvid file I got 458%.
Hi,
I have all my music library encoded as eaac+ 48kbps parametric stereo as this allows me to fit my entire music library on my microsd card.
Been using my music collection on my HTC HD2 which i soon replaced with the Desire.
Thing is that after some of the tracks i've been listening to started sounding funny, i've investigated more on the issue to find out that the Android eaac+ encoder seems to be doing quite a bad job...
For example the .aac file i've attached sounds almost perfect on my laptop and HD2 (using the same hi quality Sennheiser headphones) but on the desire the low bass sounds are awful, it's just like someone is hitting on a broken drum.
Could someone please help me confirm this issue? Could you try playing the attached test .aac file on the htc desire and let me know if you encounter the same problem with it sounding awful? (Try also on a laptop with latest winamp to see the difference).
Thanks !
Hi ubik,
All my digital audio files are also eaac+ at 48kbps, but are in .m4a containers, not .aac, but that shouldn't make any difference (By the way aac+ with parametric stereo = eaac+). As I'm about to buy a Desire, your post made me think that maybe the Desire doesn't support eaac+, only aac+. Iphones and ipods only support aac+, so eaac+ files come out in mono and sound rubbish on those devices. HTC's website doesn't confirm if the Desire plays eaac+ files, so I contacted HTC via their website, and they confirmed that the Desire supports these audio formats .wma, .aac, .m4a, .mp3, .mp4 and .wav files And these codecs WAV, WMA, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, M4A, MP3 and MP4. Therefore if it supports the eaac+ codec, you should get CD quality sound with your eaac+ files at 48kbps. Maybe you should ask HTC about this via their website.
SpaceGooner said:
Hi ubik,
All my digital audio files are also eaac+ at 48kbps, but are in .m4a containers, not .aac, but that shouldn't make any difference (By the way aac+ with parametric stereo = eaac+). As I'm about to buy a Desire, your post made me think that maybe the Desire doesn't support eaac+, only aac+. Iphones and ipods only support aac+, so eaac+ files come out in mono and sound rubbish on those devices. HTC's website doesn't confirm if the Desire plays eaac+ files, so I contacted HTC via their website, and they confirmed that the Desire supports these audio formats .wma, .aac, .m4a, .mp3, .mp4 and .wav files And these codecs WAV, WMA, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, M4A, MP3 and MP4. Therefore if it supports the eaac+ codec, you should get CD quality sound with your eaac+ files at 48kbps. Maybe you should ask HTC about this via their website.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's funny, I contacted HTC support about playing .m4a files and the reply was, and I quote, "You can not play the m4a files by default on your device and you need to search over the Android market for a compatible application with your device to allow you play such files on your device."
I myself haven't been able to playback .m4a files with several music players, including the default HTC one and players downloaded from the market.
Is anyone actually able to play this file type?
SpaceGooner said:
Hi ubik,
All my digital audio files are also eaac+ at 48kbps, but are in .m4a containers, not .aac, but that shouldn't make any difference (By the way aac+ with parametric stereo = eaac+). As I'm about to buy a Desire, your post made me think that maybe the Desire doesn't support eaac+, only aac+. Iphones and ipods only support aac+, so eaac+ files come out in mono and sound rubbish on those devices. HTC's website doesn't confirm if the Desire plays eaac+ files, so I contacted HTC via their website, and they confirmed that the Desire supports these audio formats .wma, .aac, .m4a, .mp3, .mp4 and .wav files And these codecs WAV, WMA, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, M4A, MP3 and MP4. Therefore if it supports the eaac+ codec, you should get CD quality sound with your eaac+ files at 48kbps. Maybe you should ask HTC about this via their website.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What i did is dump my eaac+ converted music library as it sounded bad on my Desire and it was really a lot of music that i did not listen to; being a lot of media files, the music player was very sluggish. I reordered my original mp3s and made a selection of music that i do listen.
I admit, this is not the solution to the problem (using mp3s instead of eaac+ and using less files because the player is sluggish) but it is a great phone overall and who knows what the future brings (Android 2.2 Froyo for example).
I'm not impressed with how google has failed to respond my bug report, but it's hard for me to find faults with this phone, after using the HTC HD2 i'm wondering how i could live with winmo's faults all this time
Hey,
I plan to buy a Desire, but this could be a dealbreaker for me:
Does this occur with AAC+ (e.g. HE-AACv1, without Parametric Stereo) as well? My whole music library is in that format!
It would be really great if somebody could confirm the situation. If you don't have access to any AAC+ files of your own, I uploaded one to drop.io/3q2r8b7/asset/desire-heaac-test-zip in MP3, AAC+ (HE-AAC v1) and eAAC+ (HE-AAC v2).
Thanks!
hi,
all three files sound ok on my desire (i can tell very little difference between them)
maybe you should try giving me something with more base sound (this is where i notices the problem)
you gave me symphonic music which has more of the high notes
ubik said:
hi,
all three files sound ok on my desire (i can tell very little difference between them)
maybe you should try giving me something with more base sound (this is where i notices the problem)
you gave me symphonic music which has more of the high notes
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you very much for testing.
I've now uploaded another track with more bass in it: drop.io/3q2r8b7/asset/backleg-heaac-test-zip
Hi,
i've tried these three files on my desire and they sound just fine !
can you tell us the exact settings u've used for music encoding? we might be onto something here...
ubik said:
Hi,
i've tried these three files on my desire and they sound just fine !
can you tell us the exact settings u've used for music encoding? we might be onto something here...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've encoded them with the Nero AAC Codec, Version 1.5.4.0, with the command line parameters -br 32000 for the v2 one, and -br 48000 for the v1 (Nero autoselects the appropriate codec for the chosen bitrate that way).
Did you encode your 48kbps files to HE-AAC v2? That could be the cause of your problem; v2 uses Parametric Stereo, which can improve quality for very low bitrates (<32kbps); but for 48kbps you usually get better results with just using HE-AAC v1.
Be sure to use the newest version from www .nero.com/enu/downloads-nerodigital-nero-aac-codec.php, as the change log specifically mentions some fixed incompatibilities with some hardware devices.
my files for the most part are AAC in mp4 or m4a extensions.
done myself with belight and neros AAC encoder. haven't had any problems at all with the default player or meridian
p.s some are about 2-3 years old at least and still play fine. older ones are mp3 though
I had a similar problem with my Desire. Music sounded AWFUL. Lots of clicks and pops on drum sounds. I normalized the mp3s to 90% and it seems to have fixed it.
Does the evo support mpeg4 movie playback and if not what can I use to decode them to play on evo,thanks.
find RockPlayer - its the best, plays everything - even .avi's
Just dont watch too much pr0n or you'll go blind.....
Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk
did you mean h264, not mpeg4? without any addons, you'll play baseline h264 in mp4 with no problems... for more than that, hit up yxplayer or rockplayer, as stated above.
btw, mpeg is a too general term.. mpeg4 part 10 is h264 video. mpeg4 part 14 is a MP4 file format, which has nothing to do with video/audio codecs (mp4 is a container). mpeg4 part 25 is a friggin 3D graphics compression model, lol.
QQPlayer
Mobile QQ player is one of the best video player application running on Android smartphones that supports all the popular formats of videos on the market, including AVI, FLV, MP4, 3GP, MKV, MOV and etc. In addition, QQ Player also supports SRT, SMI plug-in subtitle and MKV embedded subtitle, as well as multiple audio tracks switching. Its smart core technology auto detects video formats and makes it much easier for you to enjoy smoother, better quality videos with limited resources and smaller screen.
Hope everybody likes ..... Thanks
Download link
DOWNLOAD HERE :- QQPlayer v1.2.234
Wondering if there is a player that will play F4F files... See, I bought The Croods and it has a digital copy which is fine, but you HAVE to have signal to play it and, well, T-Mobile lacks in the signal dept somethin fierce... So, I found the FILE it put on the PC but it is a F4F file, as I understand some kind of segmented 6 gigabyte nightmare, and want to copy this to my tablet and phone and let the kids watch it without needing an internet connection...
I know a tool that can play F4F files very well. What is more, it can also help convert F4F files to other popular formats so that you can play your F4F files freely. It can be easily gotten in Google by typing "Bigasoft F4F Converter".
This guide can also help:
Convert F4F to MP4 to play F4F videos on VLC, Apple TV, QuickTime, iTunes, iPad, iPod, iPhone, etc.
Convert F4F to AVI or WMV to play F4F in Windows Media Player, Blackberry, PSP, PS3, Xbox 360, Creative Zen, Zune, and more.
Convert F4F to MPG or MP4 to import F4F in iMovie, Adobe Premiere, Final Cut Express, Final Cut Pro, Windows Movie Maker, Sony Vegas, etc for editing.
Convert F4F to FLV, AVI, or MP4 to upload F4F videos to YouTube, Facebook, and other popular video sharing websites.
Convert F4F files to DVD supported Divx to burn F4F to DVD.
Convert F4F to other popular video formats like convert F4F to WTV, MKV, Apple ProRes, Xvid, DivX, H.264, 3GP, RM, MOV, WebM, VP8, 720p, 1080p, 1080i HD, AVCHD videos and more.
The Convert F4F to popular audio formats like convert F4F to MP3, AAC, AC3, WAV, WMA, FLAC, OGG, AIFF and etc.
F4F Joiner - Join F4F video clips and fragments into one.
F4F Player - Play F4F files freely and easily.
F4F Converter Windows version supports all Windows systems including Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 2000.
F4F Converter Mac version is compatible with Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks), 10.8(OS X Mountain Lion), 10.7(OS X Lion), 10.6(Snow Leopard), 10.5(Leopard), Mac OS X 10.4(Tiger).