AoTuV: Difference between revisions

From Hydrogenaudio Knowledgebase
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
'''aoTuV''' is an abbreviation for '''Aoyumi's Tuned Vorbis'''; it is third-party development/tuning of the [[Ogg Vorbis|Vorbis]] encoding algorithm.
'''aoTuV''' is an abbreviation for '''Aoyumi's Tuned Vorbis'''; it is third-party development/tuning of the [[Ogg Vorbis|Vorbis]] encoding algorithm.


aoTuV versions improves significantly on Vorbis quality: Most people agree '''aoTuV beta 4''' achieves [[transparency]] at -q 5.
aoTuV versions improves significantly on Vorbis quality: Most people agree '''aoTuV beta 5''' achieves [[transparency]] at -q 5.


The latest version is '''aoTuV Beta 5''' (which is actually a re-branded '''aoTuV beta 4.51''' after undergoing extensive peer review). It improves further on low bit-rate quality, to such extent that some reports -q 1 (approx. 80 kbps) is good enough for streaming.
The latest version is '''aoTuV Beta 5''' (which is actually a re-branded '''aoTuV beta 4.51''' after undergoing extensive peer review). It improves further on low bit-rate quality, to such extent that some reports -q 1 (approx. 80 kbps) is good enough for streaming.

Revision as of 18:26, 24 October 2006

aoTuV

aoTuV is an abbreviation for Aoyumi's Tuned Vorbis; it is third-party development/tuning of the Vorbis encoding algorithm.

aoTuV versions improves significantly on Vorbis quality: Most people agree aoTuV beta 5 achieves transparency at -q 5.

The latest version is aoTuV Beta 5 (which is actually a re-branded aoTuV beta 4.51 after undergoing extensive peer review). It improves further on low bit-rate quality, to such extent that some reports -q 1 (approx. 80 kbps) is good enough for streaming.

See Recommended Ogg Vorbis page for more details.


Links