FLAC vs. MP3 for Sonos Network


First and foremost, I am a music guy, not a computer guy.

I am planning to set up a Sonos Network in my home.

My computer guy from work is helping me get set up on the computer side of this project (w/NAS & software, etc.)

I let him know that FLAC & EAC are things that are recommended by the a'gon community.

He felt that MP3 may be a better choice, as it is more universally used, etc. His big concern was the ability to copy music to an ipod, if I wanted to do that, which is a possibility down the road.

Any thoughts on how to move forward?

Are there or will there be ipod type players that recognise FLAC?

What are the pro's & con's in deciding of FLAC vs. MP3?

Thanks!
barrelchief

Showing 1 response by metralla

I believe you can load software on your iPod called Rockbox that will decode FLAC. I have not changed my iPod over, so I can't speak from experience. You have to be pretty geeky to take this path, so I dare say, it's not for you.

When you put a CD in with iTunes running, and it wants to import it, you could import using the WAV Encoder (see Preferences -> Advanced -> Importing). You should have error correction turned on.

You could also import using the Apple Lossless Encoder. Importing as WAV files will use up as much as a CD (say 500MB on average) while using Apple Lossless would be about half that (250MB).

You can push either of these at your iPod and it will play them. Obviously, using WAV files is a hungry option - maybe you'll get 120 albums on a 60GB iPod; say 240 albums using Apple Lossless.

In my opinion, you should have enough hard drive storage on your network system to store uncompressed. You could use EAC to rip the files to your storage system as WAV files, and store these outside of iTunes. Then you can use iTunes to make up a temporary library of MP3s, if you really want to store a lot of music on your iPod.

There are a few options to consider. As long as you continue to keep your CDs, you'll be able to go back to the source again. A bit of work of course.

Regards,