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January 16th, 2002, 09:41 PM
#1
Registered User
adding Music to my site
Just wondering what the proper way is to adding some Music clips of my wife and her band to my Website.
should it be in a zip file and make the user download it or should it run directly from a media player that I add to my site.
I need to know the best way that will take the least amount of space.
what format should the file be.
in MP3 a 1:30 min clip is 20MEGs Way too much for my 15 availible space.
I only want to add 2-3 clips.
any suggestions.
or programs that could help
I'm usiing Frontpage 2002.
I hope that someday we will be able to put away our fears and prejudices and just laugh at people.
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January 16th, 2002, 10:25 PM
#2
Registered User
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January 16th, 2002, 10:33 PM
#3
Registered User
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January 16th, 2002, 11:02 PM
#4
20Mb's would be about right for a 1:30min .wav file.....definitely a conversion is called for.
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January 17th, 2002, 06:16 PM
#5
Registered User
Will get my buddy to post here and tell what he has done.
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January 17th, 2002, 10:48 PM
#6
Registered User
[quote]Originally posted by Sowulo:
<strong>20Mb's would be about right for a 1:30min .wav file.....definitely a conversion is called for.</strong><hr></blockquote>
True, but Danimal specified MP3 in the original post. If it were WAV format that we were talking about, then that certainly would be a horse of a different color.
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January 18th, 2002, 07:51 AM
#7
The thing about leaving them on your site and haveing listeners listen to them through your site is I don't know how much more your bandwith will be. If they download it, then you only have to worry about the bandwith for people downloading. Hopefully they download it once, and listen to it many times, instead of keep pulling it from your site making bandwith jump pretty high. Have you looked into seeing if you can have a site at mp3.com? Not sure how much that will cost, but it would be more geared toward what you want to do I think.
<a href="http://www.thetechhandbook.com?linkid=windrivers" target="_blank">The Tech Handbook</a> Where the information is always free.
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January 18th, 2002, 09:27 AM
#8
Registered User
[quote]Originally posted by TheTechHandbook.com:
<strong>The thing about leaving them on your site and haveing listeners listen to them through your site is I don't know how much more your bandwith will be. If they download it, then you only have to worry about the bandwith for people downloading. Hopefully they download it once, and listen to it many times, instead of keep pulling it from your site making bandwith jump pretty high. Have you looked into seeing if you can have a site at mp3.com? Not sure how much that will cost, but it would be more geared toward what you want to do I think.</strong><hr></blockquote>
there's only going to be about 3-4 clip max on my budy's site that I will link to and from my site. to meit doesn't matter.
maybe you guys could post the steps to make a clip ready for the web
Starting from a CDRW that has 2 songs on it.
which software to use to break it down and which format to save it as. then we can deal with the uploading of the file . whether to make the user download or not.
I hope that someday we will be able to put away our fears and prejudices and just laugh at people.
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January 19th, 2002, 12:08 AM
#9
Hey dudes. Thanks for your help. I'm the guy danimal is talking about here. Turned out that my MP3 compressor is bugged. Anybody know a good freebie compressor?
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January 19th, 2002, 10:11 AM
#10
Registered User
Actually Mike the computer guy in town said to use real Jukeboc to cut and edit music files.
and to save them in MP3 file format.
Wannabe geek! ROFLMAO!!! LOL
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January 22nd, 2002, 09:38 PM
#11
[quote]Originally posted by DANIMAL:
<strong>Actually Mike the computer guy in town said to use real Jukeboc to cut and edit music files.
and to save them in MP3 file format.
Wannabe geek! ROFLMAO!!! LOL</strong><hr></blockquote>
Go with Music Match. It uses one of the compression schemes that the person that created mp3's created. I wish I could find the link about it, but the compression is great.
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