Hydrogenaudio Closes Doors For Now 118
verloren writes "The Admins at Hydrogenaudio, the community site discussing audio compression and related issues, have temporarily closed the site. They've posted a notice stating that they're rethinking the standards of the community, and how they're enforced. It seems to have been sparked most recently by a debate over what media players to use, but has been brewing for some time as the objective standards required at the site have been overlooked by many posters. The sister sites Foobar2000 and Rarewares are still available."
Re:Its the same old story. (Score:2)
Could you explain a little more? It's not like slashdot is getting any real work done, yet we all agree we couldn't live without it, right?
Seriously, sometimes it's time to think, and sometimes it's time for action. You mean now is definately not a time to think? (Pardon the messed up quote from Candy, I think..)
Re:Its the same old story. (Score:1)
What I mean is, code is what counts.
If any of the competing factions had actually gotten working code *done*, and being used by actual humans to solve the media file-format problems, then there probably wouldn't have been this demise to report
Re:Its the same old story. (Score:2)
Re:Its the same old story. (Score:2)
Actually, I've been here less and less lately. This place is too aggressive, and I'm finding that when I DO go to get real work done on other message boards, I end up thrashing someone with a slashdot-style diatrabe(diatribe? Diettrade? Sally Struthers?), and nobody wants that.
Maybe the trolls.
Re:Its the same old story. (Score:2)
You Fools! (Score:2, Funny)
I think that has just became an even bigger problem!
Forced? (Score:1)
This smells fishy to me... almost sounds like the NSA shut them down
But seriously, can someone shed some light on the whole thing?
Re:Forced? (Score:5, Interesting)
When testing audio codecs it's important to do a double blind test. (On HA they would call it "ABX", I think that was because that's the name of the program)
The easiest way to do it is to give a program the source file and the encoded version.
(Or two encoded files with diffrent codecs, depending on what you wanted to accomplish.
For transparency, ie can you tell the diffrence between a MP3 encoded with X options and the source file?, you would give source and encoded.
For comparison between 64 K Vorbis and WMA youi give two of those files)
The program would play them 8 times (or so), first one then the other, but you can't know which file is which since it would alternate.
You listen carefully and give it a score.
At the end the program tells you which file you preferred.
With psychoacoustic encoding that's the whole deal: you want to encode the file in such a way that for a human it seems as close to the original as possible.
Because of bias, a double blind test is THE ONLY way to accurately rate lossy encoders
But the newbies would come and say:
Hey this codec is better then that codec.
How do you know?
It sounds better
Have you done a ABX?
No, but my ears are golden
Or they would come:
I compared a graph of the source with the encoded file and this codec produces files that seem the most identical.
Both of these are totally wrong, and sometimes you would have dudes that would insist that one of these methods are good, no matter how much you try to talk some sense into them.
And another problem: misinformed audiophiles
"Oh no the stereo image is holy, joint-stereo is from the devil!"
Never mind that LAME has an excellent joint-stereo system.
And they would come with other crazy theories, for example challenging Shannon's theory that to encode a X Hz signal you only need 2X of bandiwdth.
So that's a part of it
Re:Forced? (Score:1, Redundant)
I'm quite familiar with the technology (I make music and have coded some DSP), but I didn't realize what all the fuss was about.
Re:Forced? (Score:2)
"Oh no the stereo image is holy, joint-stereo is from the devil!"
Maybe I'm misinformed too, but I thought stereo meant recording seperate numbers for each channel, and joint stereo meant recording a number for one channel and a delta for the other channel(s), and that one could be trivially converted to the other.
The benefit (as I understood it) of joint stereo was that the delta was usually of smaller magnitude, and thus had a smaller range and more repeats o
Re:Forced? (Score:2)
In practice, it also lets you can also quantize channels differently (whether they're left/right or mid/side) to improve compression/quality so in a lossy codec so the two versions aren't guaranteed to be bit-for-bit identical. In a really crappy/bugged enc
Re:Forced? (Score:2)
Re:Forced? (Score:2)
Isn't that Nyquist's Theorum rather than Shannon's?
You're both right (Score:1)
Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem [wikipedia.org]. Nyquist formulated it; Shannon proved it formally.
Re:Forced? (Score:2)
Re:never heard of it/standards rant (Score:5, Informative)
No. Hydrogenaudio is an audio discussion board where development and testing of various audio formats/encoders and the foobar2000 [foobar2000.org] player takes place, but this is not the main aspect of the board. It's just an informed community (well, mostly) that maintains a high standard of discussion (unlike this place).
Which is why I wish this had never been posted here, now look at the mess and all the misinformation flowing here already... >:(
Nevertheless (Score:2, Interesting)
Corporate sponsors or not, if there is a large community (as they claim), plans must be made to shut it down.
Gee, what would happen if /. did that?
Re:Nevertheless (Score:3, Insightful)
If it's a flamewar on a previously quiet board you may.
Corporate sponsors or not
HA has no corporate sponsors. Foobar2000 is a free program (not OSS IIRC, but no money to use).
Gee, what would happen if
People would bitch and whine and find something else to do with their time. Subscribers would be the only ones with a valid issue.
Free online forums have no obligation to their users to remain a
Re:Nevertheless (Score:1)
For god's sake, they didn't! The "heated discussion" is not the reason for the closure, the article submitted by verloren totally mispresents this (in fact the whole thing never should have been posted here, because it's quite irrelevant news here, and it was bound to be twisted by the uninformed crowd).
Also, for the umpteenth time, HA is not closing for good, they will re-open within the next few days. Suppose t
Re:never heard of it/standards rant (Score:2)
The main article here was either so badly written, or so badly mangled by the editor, that I don't think the original point they were trying to make is salvagable. Give up folks. You'll never stop the Slashdot horde from righteous indignation at a corporate-type "controlling audio standards" on this one. To many post-only accounts, not enough read.
Re:You are mistaken. (Score:5, Insightful)
So are sharks and lichens.
But they're not going to disappear anytime soon, and I doubt MP3 will either. Other formats may be technically superior, but (like technically superior primate brains) also require superior resources to support them; superior processor speed (OGG) or superior storage space (FLACC or Monkey).
MP3 also probably has the largest share of the compressed audio formats, and there are definite drawbacks to transcoding: loss of fidelity, time to transcode, need to store both the old format and the new during the transition phase. So a significant portion of the corpus in MP3 will likely not be replaced with newer, better formats.
And just as plenty of music has been compressed with MP3, plenty of players play MP3 -- and only MP3. Players like my 60GB portable. I've invested quite a bit in my portable, and that locks me into MP3. MP3 will stay around, because people with MP3 (only) players will still want music.
Since MP3 is sufficient unto my needs, I certainly won't abandon it until and unless my portable breaks down (it's an Archos, so that might be soon). Even after my portable breaks down, I'll still have over 7000 MP3s, many of which were purchased through emusic.com, so I can't re-rip them. Unless transcoding to $next_format sounds better than a MP3, I won't be transcoding those files, which means when my portable MP3 player breaks down, I'll insist that the replacement play MP3. Only if my next portable plays both MP3s and $next_format will $next_format begin to interest me at all.
So MP3 may well be an evolutionary dead end, but evolutionary dead end and species extinction are two very differnt things that don't necesarily correlate.
I'll add to that (Score:2, Insightful)
You are right, but I guess that for a lot of people, a MP3 encoded at 128k sounds the same as the original. That can happen for several reasons: you may have a low-quality output device (bad speakers, cheap and lousy headphones), a bad sound card, you may have some kind of hearing disability (you may be deaf for some high or low frequecies).
So, agreeing with you, why should these people reencode their files using a better audio format? Like you mentioned, the
Re:I'll add to that (Score:2)
I think those people just haven't done the side-by-side comparison. 128k sounds "good enough" so they don't really care. For most stuff it's pretty easy to tell 128k from 192k when given the same recording at the two bitrates playing one after the other; the 128k usually sounds louder (noisier).
$slackdot-joke (Score:4, Funny)
or am I too late already?
some clarification about HA (Score:5, Informative)
1. HydrogenAudio is/was the No. 1 place on the net regarding the development of audio codecs and other audio related tools. Think of it as "the bugtraq of audio". Several developers of open- and closedsource codecs participated regularly in the discussions and the community helped by providing blind test results (some of them appeared on slashdot even), problem-samples and ideas/general input. It was the center of development of the widely used lame --alt-presets, which brought a new level of quality to MP3 and the foobar2000 audio player.
2. No legal problems whatsoever are connected to the closing down.
3. HA is going to come back shortly (= some days).
Re:some clarification about HA (Score:2, Insightful)
To my knowledge, we haven't seen an audio format or codec that has reached tier 1 status (RedBook, MP3, WAV, MIDI, etc.) that did not have major corporate involvement in its development. Even with DivX, we often see industry-standard audio codecs used... I don't see a community-based codec group inventing a new codec that gets used for anything more than illegally ripping DVDs and posting
Re:some clarification about HA (Score:1)
A lot of developers hang out there and discuss their ideas with the users (e.g. Ivan Dimkovic and Menno Baker - Ahead Nero AAC codec; Josh Coalson - FLAC; J.M. Valin - Speex; G. Bouvigne - LAME).
Re:some clarification about HA (Score:5, Insightful)
The site is closed temporarily to rethink the standards of the community -- of the HydrogenAudio community, not of the music encoding community as a whole. They're not trying to create new audio compression standards while closed -- they're trying to formulate new rules to reduce flamage on the forums (which is pretty much all that HA is). If
Re:Dysfunctional organization (Score:1)
So what is the Hydrogenaudio equivalent of goatse posters? (Or should I ask?)
Re:Dysfunctional organization (Score:2)
I would guess it would be people who post links to something like this [ofdoom.com].
(If you want more audio monstrosities, look in that directory - I'm testing how different codecs respond at extremely low bit rates )
Re:Dysfunctional organization (Score:2)
Hope it comes back (Score:3)
I hope that it returns soon.
Not surprising (Score:1, Interesting)
Well, I'm glad to see this story... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm really hoping that this story leads to more attention being paid to foobar, as I think it's a real gem.
Re:Foobar 2000 (Score:1)
Foobar 2000 [foobar2000.org] is now at a 0.71 release and is by far the most full featured and elegant media player I've seen on Windows. First time users might it a little sparse as the interface is very bland and not skinnable like Winamp or Sonique. However, under the hood is an amazing plugin architecture that is very well designed.
Some highlights for me:
Re:The name is everything (Score:1)
descriptive? (Score:1)
it's the usual file extension for the 'Motion Picture Experts Group Audio Layer 3' format. 'Ogg Vorbis' is certainly less descriptive.
How is the description of .ogg "certainly less descriptive"?
Re:The name is everything (Score:5, Informative)
However, recently Ogg Vorbis has been falling out of favour because of some questions beinr brought up and currently still unanswered about the truth of the statement that Ogg Vorbis is "patent-free" because of a few patents uncovered recently which Ogg Vorbis may have infringed on. So far Xiph has not answered the questions to the satisfaction of the administrators of the forums... but I doubt all this is the main cause of the forum to suspend service, but maybe one of many. *shrug*
Re:The name is everything (Score:5, Informative)
However, recently Ogg Vorbis has been falling out of favour because of some questions beinr brought up and currently still unanswered about the truth of the statement that Ogg Vorbis is "patent-free" because of a few patents uncovered recently which Ogg Vorbis may have infringed on.
To give air to the otherside of that flamewar, the 'unanswered' questions had more to do with a misunderstanding on the part of some forum members about how the patent system works in the US. "Patent-free" does not mean no one will sue you ever, because anyone can sue you anytime for anything. It's all about the negotiation of expectation for who would win at what cost in a potential legal action.
In that context, and because we feel Xiph.org the organization is a likely target of punitive legal action, we unfortunately feel the less said about what we think about specific patents, the better, to avoid advertising routes of legal attack. Hardly the usual values of openness, but that's what the US legal system argues for.
What Vorbis needs is independent defenders who understand the issues, not demands for justification from groups that should mostly be on the same side.
Re:The name is everything (Score:1)
Wrong. (Score:2)
Patent issues are a real concern if you build and sell the Ogg Vorbis portables we all clamour for.
Re:The name is everything (Score:2)
Yes, AAC is like MP3 only better (Score:2)
I found the same thing in my test (Score:1)
AAC vs. MP3 vs. OGG vs. AIF
Re:The name is everything (Score:2)
common among many OSS projects (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:1)
MP3 came into use partly because the format became the 'Kleenex' or 'Xerox' or 'Coke' of this space. I wouldn't be surprised if people keep calling their electronic music M
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:2)
Well, it does sound cooler than Outlook. What does Outlook do? Sell binoculars over the web?:)
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:1)
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:2)
Are you saying that FLAC shoots down airplanes and unpopular individuals?:)
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:1)
Only occasionally. Flak works better for that.
Josh
P.S. m-w.com says:
Etymology: German, from Fliegerabwehrkanonen, from Flieger (flyer) + Abwehr (defense) + Kanonen (cannons)
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:1)
Um, no, I can't
Linux (Sounds like UNIX)
And this is good because? By your rules, UNIX is not a good name - anyone who doesn't know what GNU is isn't likely to know what UNIX is either. So why is sounding like it good?
As for "Audacity" or "Evolution" - what's good about them? And "X-Chat" sounds like a place where extreme sports fans hang out.
Re:common among many OSS projects (Score:1)
As for "Audacity" or "Evolution" - what's good about them?
I don't know about "Evolution", but "Audacity" shares the first three letters with "audio", which it edits.
Re:The name is everything (Score:2)
Re:Decent media players? (Score:1)
foobar2000 (Score:2, Offtopic)
Developed at Hydrogenaudio by Peter Pawlowski [of former Winamp fame] et al.
Re:foobar2000 (Score:2)
Re:Decent media players? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Decent media players? (Score:1, Offtopic)