Taperssection.com
Gear / Technical Help => Post-Processing, Computer / Streaming / Internet Devices & Related Activity => Topic started by: voltronic on January 15, 2024, 06:54:54 PM
-
I was just referred to this site by a member on GS Remote Possibilities and my mind is blown. This is easily the best solution I've seen for privately (or publicly) sharing audio files and getting feedback from clients or other musicians. Even at the free tier, you get 25 GB storage, lossless and gapless playback along with comments, versioning, and a host of other features.
https://samply.app/
Here's an example. This is a playlist of all of the stereo recording samples that used to appear on the DPA website before they "upgraded". Before you listen scroll all the way to the bottom and under Audio Options, Lossless Playback. (Paid tiers allow you to enable this by default for your recipients.)
https://samply.app/player/yOdh6kbQPzbe6cBCHwZ8/
-
This does look interesting and potentially very useful, thanks for the heads up!
-
Thanks volt. Looks great.
-
In the same thread on Gearspace, another user just recommended this site for ABX testing. Not fully lossless as it converts WAV files to 16/48 FLAC. Apparently the developers are responsive so maybe they will offer 24bit in the future.
https://abx.funkybits.fr/
-
they seem to be brand new and responsive. I signed up and they contacted me to see if I had any questions or issues.
-
they seem to be brand new and responsive. I signed up and they contacted me to see if I had any questions or issues.
I had the same experience. Really makes a great first impression when you have that personal contact.
-
^ Boosting this to the top. The more I use Samply, the more I love it. I'm never going back to sharing through Dropbox or Mega again!
-
The "L" in FLAC is for lossless.
Are they lying?
-
Looks promising.
-
The "L" in FLAC is for lossless.
Are they lying?
Huh?
-
The "L" in FLAC is for lossless.
Are they lying?
Huh?
FLAC is "Free Lossless Audio Codec"
Dynamic range (after recording) of 16 bits is above the threshold of human distinction, once ear physiology and noise is accounted for.
"The difference between 16 and 24 bit depths is not the accuracy in the shape of a waveform, but the available limit before digital noise interferes with our signal"
- https://www.soundguys.com/audio-bit-depth-explained-23706/
It seems that normalized, even 16bits is a little overkill.
But, yeah, I do listen at 24/96, even 24/192 fairly often.
I'm not sure I ever hear a difference.
Not as much a difference as Columbian Coffee to Ethiopian ;)
-
Yeah I know all that stuff, just don't understand why you asked if someone was lying.
-
The "L" in FLAC is for lossless.
Are they lying?
Huh?
FLAC is "Free Lossless Audio Codec"
Dynamic range (after recording) of 16 bits is above the threshold of human distinction, once ear physiology and noise is accounted for.
"The difference between 16 and 24 bit depths is not the accuracy in the shape of a waveform, but the available limit before digital noise interferes with our signal"
- https://www.soundguys.com/audio-bit-depth-explained-23706/
It seems that normalized, even 16bits is a little overkill.
But, yeah, I do listen at 24/96, even 24/192 fairly often.
I'm not sure I ever hear a difference.
Not as much a difference as Columbian Coffee to Ethiopian ;)
This has nothing at all to do with what's being discussed.
-
Right, I'm still on the "huh?" side of things. No idea what the meaning or context of those comments are.
-
New avatar suggestion for Mr. Chip Paper..
(https://i.postimg.cc/MTFSKQXP/Chip-Paper.jpg)
-
Samply has solved a problem of being able to deliver masters to clients whom I record and master their tracks. Wav files and higher bitrate mp3's are also supported.
They have tackled some important issues like being able to play files in web browsers, embed files in social media sites and playback on phones. They also now have an IOS app.
I am into my 2nd year of this now with the paid tier and am very satisfied with the responsiveness and attention to detail.
Gordon
-
Thank you for that report. I like that you can do a 2-stage payment system, where you could require one payment for the client to access the initial mixes/masters, and then a second payment to be able to download the final product.