Audio - WMA

 

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 may have been that MP3 technology is patented and has to be licensed from Thomson SA for inclusion in the Microsoft Windows operating system .

A large number of consumer devices, ranging from portable hand-held music players to portable CD player and set-top DVD players support the playback of WMA files. In terms of number of devices supported, WMA is second only to MP3 in popularity.

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.

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.

The most current version of the format is Windows Media Audio 9.1 which includes specific codecs for lossless , multi-channel surround sound and voice encoding in addition to the main lossy codec. Both constant and variable bit rate encoding are supported.

In November 2005, an 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.

Codecs and versions

WMA is often referred to a WMA 7 codec. With the version 9 WMA bundle includes three more codecs, including a voice codec, lossless codec and so-called WMA 9 Pro codec. The last one is based on a completely different technology (highly superior to "ordinary" WMA in terms of quality and features) and thus WMA 9 Pro files are incompatible with older players. Currently there's also no hardware support for this codec.

Sound quality

Microsoft claims that files in WMA format sound better than MP3 files at higher bitrates, but this has been heavily disputed. Various tests have been run comparing WMA and other lossy codecs; the results are, at best, inconclusive. Some claim that WMA's sound quality is inferior to that of other codecs; others claim that this is simply Microsoft Bashing . Given the subjective nature of music listening in general, an objective determination may be impossible.

Janus

Main article: Janus (DRM)

WMA Janus, also known as WMA Version 10, is the most recent audio format introduced by Microsoft. The main difference between Janus and regular WMA is the DRM technology, which supports time limited music such as those offered by unlimited download services, such as Napster or Yahoo! Music Unlimited . Janus DRM is incompatible with portable audio devices that only support up to WMA DRM Version 9.

See also

External links

* The above text is quoted from Wikipedia

MediaCoder - The universal audio/video batch transcoder
MediaCoder is a free software written by Stanley Huang.
Feel free to play with it and distribute it.

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