WMA to MP3 Converter:
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About WMA File Format and WMA to MP3 Converter:
Windows Media Audio (WMA) is a proprietary compressed audio file
format developed by Microsoft. It was initially a competitor to the MP3
format, but with the introduction of Apple's iTunes Music Store, it has
positioned itself as a competitor to the Advanced Audio Coding format
used by Apple. It is part of the Windows Media framework. An initial
reason for the development of WMA might have been that MP3 technology is
patented and has to be licensed from Thomson SA for inclusion in the
Microsoft Windows operating system.
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A WMA file is almost always encapsulated in an Advanced Systems Format (ASF)
file. The resulting file may have the filename suffix "wma" or "asf"
with the "wma" suffix being used only if the file is strictly audio. The
ASF file format specifies how metadata about the file is to be encoded,
akin to the ID3 tags used by MP3 files. ASF is also patented in the
United States.
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Files in this format can be played using Windows Media Player, Winamp
(with certain limitations, DSP plugin support and DirectSound output is
disabled using the default WMA plugin) and many other alternative media
players. The FFmpeg project has reverse-engineered and reimplemented the
WMA format to allow its use on POSIX compliant operating systems such as
Linux.
Windows Media Audio supports digital rights management using a
combination of elliptic curve cryptography key exchange, DES block
cipher, a custom block cipher, RC4 stream cipher and the SHA-1 hashing
function..
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Design
WMA is capable of VBR, CBR and lossless audio encoding in order to be
marketed as a versatile format.
Windows Media Audio can optionally support digital rights management
using a combination of elliptic curve cryptography key exchange, DES
block cipher, a custom block cipher, RC4 stream cipher and the SHA-1
hashing function.
A WMA file is often encapsulated in an Advanced Systems Format (ASF)
file. The resulting file may have the extension "wma" or "asf" with the
"wma" extension being used only if the file is strictly audio. The ASF
file format specifies how metadata about the file is to be encoded, akin
to the ID3 tags used by MP3 files.
Codecs and versions
WMA began being widely distributed starting with the WMA 7 lossy
compression based codec and has now reached version 9.2 (Windows Media
Player 11). Microsoft's WMA bundle also includes three more codecs, a
Windows Media Audio 9 Voice codec, Windows Media Audio 9.2 Lossless
codec and Windows Media Audio 10 Professional codec (earlier known as
WMA 9 Pro). The WMA 10 Pro codec is based on a completely different
technology which is not only superior to ordinary WMA in terms of
quality and features, but also scales really well at low bitrates.
However, the WMA Pro standard is often confused with the original WMA
and thus is less popular. Also, the files are incompatible with older
players and WMA Pro is yet to gain wide playback support in devices. WMA
10 Pro supports 96 kHz 24-bit audio as well as 5.1/7.1 discrete
multi-channel audio.
Windows Media Player 11 is the latest version of Microsoft's media
player. It adds low bitrate support for WMA Pro, support for ripping
music to WMA Pro and updates the original WMA to version 9.2.
Players
Apart from Windows Media Player, WMA files can be played using MPlayer,
Winamp (with certain limitations — DSP plugin support and DirectSound
output is disabled using the default WMA plugin), RealPlayer, and many
other media players. The FFmpeg project has reverse-engineered and
reimplemented the WMA format to allow its use on POSIX compliant
operating systems such as Linux, and RealNetworks has announced plans to
support playing non-DRMed WMA files in RealPlayer for Linux[1].
Microsoft's new Zune software, along with the new Zune portable player,
supports WMA as well as a Zune Ecosystem specific variation of WMA DRM.
In November of 2005, a new update was available for the PlayStation
Portable (version 2.60) which allowed WMA files to be played on the
console for the first time.
Sound quality
Initially Microsoft claimed that files in WMA format sounded better than
MP3 files at the same bitrate; Microsoft also claimed that WMA files
sounded better than MP3 files at higher bitrates. However, double blind
listening tests with other lossy audio codecs have consistently failed
to support Microsoft's claims about its superior quality. Indeed, the
first independent test (2004/05) with WMA standard encoder provided by
the Windows Media 9, conducted at 128 kb/s, showed that WMA was roughly
equivalent to MP3 encoded with LAME encoder, inferior to AAC and Vorbis,
and superior to ATRAC3 (software version). WMA 10 Pro, however, starting
with Windows Media Player 11 is meant to compete against the popular AAC
and low bitrate aacPlus, and is clearly superior to ordinary WMA.
Some conclusions made by recent listening tests:
* At 128kb/s the most recent large scale test (2006/01) shows a four way
tie between aoTuV Vorbis, LAME-encoded MP3, WMA 9 Pro and iTunes
(QuickTime) AAC, with each codec essentially transparent (sounds
identical to the original music file). However, device and player
support for WMA Pro is not as prevalent as WMA Standard. Generally
speaking, WMA (without any other qualifiers) refers to the WMA Standard.
* At mid-low bitrates (64 kb/s or more, less than 128 kb/s), latest
private tests (80 kb/s (2005/07), 96 kb/s (2005/08)) show that WMA has a
lower quality than the lossy audio codecs AAC (HE and LC) and Vorbis, a
roughly equivalent quality than MP3, and a better quality than MPC.
However, it must be remembered that these tests are only individual
tests and not collective tests.
* At low bitrates (less than 64 kb/s), a collective independent test
targetting 32kb/s (2004/07) demonstrated that WMA is clearly superior to
MP3 (produced by LAME), but not better than modern competitive lossy
formats.
* Recent 48 kbps independent listening test organized by Sebastian Mares
and supported by Hydrogenaudio Forums included latest version of WMA 10
Pro, included in Vista OS. WMA 10 Pro has been proved to be
statistically better than WMA 9.2, but it was ranked second in the test,
being defeated (with statistical significance) by MPEG-4 HE-AAC
implementation from Nero AG (Nero Digital Audio). Results are here:
http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=50888
Many of these results, however, are difficult to keep up-to-date due to
the ever-evolving nature of the codecs.
Digital rights management
While the Windows Media Audio codec itself does not contain any digital
rights management facilities, the Advanced Systems Format (ASF)
container format, in which a WMA stream may be encapsulated, can. Janus
is the codename for a recent version of Windows Media DRM, which is
sometimes used in conjunction with WMA. The PlaysForSure DRM technology
supports time-limited subscription music such as those offered by
unlimited download services, such as MTV's URGE, Napster, Rhapsody,
Yahoo! Music Unlimited and Virgin Digital. Janus PlaysForSure DRM is
supported on many modern portable audio devices and some streaming media
clients such as Roku SoundBridge and Xbox 360.
CD tracks ripped to WMA with Windows Media Player can be optionally
"protected" (DRM-restricted) so it can only be used on a specific
system. (This should not be enabled unless there is a specific reason to
do so, such as for protecting content stored on a public use PC.)
Versions of Windows Media Player older than version 9 had this
"protection" on by default, although this setting could be easily
disabled in the UI.
Microsoft Zune introduced a variation of PlaysForSure DRM specific for
use with the Zune Ecosystem. The Zune Software and Portable Player will
not play DRM content outside of the Zune Marketplace. However, Zune
Marketplace content should work with most WMA "PlaysForSure" DRM capable
software and portables. This, however, is not officially supported by
Microsoft.
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