Ìgbà wo nínú àwọn fáìlì tí a ṣẹ́ṣẹ́ fún AAC láti lò?
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Default is 192 kbps for lossy AAC; pass-through for lossless AAC. Override to 320 kbps for audiophile or 96 kbps for voice / podcast. The choice trades file size against audible fidelity; below 96 kbps lossy artifacts become noticeable on music.
Will going from OGG to AAC reduce my audio quality?
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If OGG is lossy and AAC is lossless (e.g. MP3 → WAV), the AAC is no better than the OGG — you cannot recover information already discarded. If OGG is lossless and AAC is lossy, the AAC codec recompresses; at 192 kbps the result is transparent for most content.
Yes — drop a folder of OGG files in and we process them in parallel. Premium has more parallel workers and no per-file size cap, so a 500-file batch finishes in minutes rather than tens of minutes.
Ńtí a fẹ́ ki AAC tọju àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò tí a fẹ́ bí OGG?
MP3 plays everywhere. AAC plays on Apple, most Android, and Sonos. FLAC plays on Sonos and Android but not on older iPods. WAV plays on everything but is huge. The advanced device-preset dropdown picks a AAC codec optimized for your target hardware.
Is my OGG file private during conversion to AAC?
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Yes — uploaded OGG files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. We never play back, store long-term, or share the audio content. The full retention window is in /privacy/.
Same-codec re-mux: 10 to 30 seconds. Re-encode to a different codec: typically 10 to 20% of source duration, so a 1-hour OGG → AAC finishes in 6 to 12 minutes. Batch jobs parallelize across workers for further speedups.
Kini idi ti AAC tí wọ́n jú àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò OGG lọ?
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No automatic gain change happens unless you enable the normalize option. If you observe a level change, your audio player or media library is likely applying ReplayGain or per-track normalization on playback — not us. Disable that to hear the true AAC levels.