Many thanks Myrkul
thanks ! 🙂
😉 😉 😉
Are you on MAC ?
Try installing Bandizip.
———- Post added at 08:46 PM ———- Previous post was at 08:43 PM ———-
thank u ill try it
This was a kickstarter that just released. I was a backer and just got my download last week.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1636910846/the-tomb-raider-suite
Calling 16 bit 44.1 KHz lossless audio "high-res" is not correct either, it’s standard CD quality. Usually you’d see 24 bit 96 KHz or above for that label. The point is sorta moot though because that’s moving into serious audiophile/snake oil territory. CD audio pretty much exceeds the limits of human hearing. If you ordered a CD of TRS, you’re getting/already have the "high-res" version (unless the CDs were mastered from a lossy format… it’s been known to happen. Let’s hope not).
FLAC is a great archival format for a home music library, regardless of how good your audio system is. Reason being if you want MP3s to put on your phone, or AACs for your iPod, you can very easily encode your own, and you should be too. Having FLACs on a portable device is a huge waste of disk space, because in 99.999% of cases the player’s DAC and your headphones are too cheap to reproduce the potential, let alone in the noisy environments that you’d be listening in (bus, car, gym, etc.) If you want to use one of the tracks in a video that you’re making, FLAC will make sure that you’re not doing a lossy transcode of the audio when exporting the video. However if you download the MP3s and then want to go to another lossy format, it’s going to further "mutilate" the audio and you may end up noticeably losing quality.