Dts windows media player 129/24/2023 My general advice is : lossless for storage, lossy for playback* (but good lossy please, high bitrate MP3/AAC or such with a reference encoder). Well, this is the eternal lossy vs lossless debate. Now, you may wonder if DTS-HD does sound better than the DTS core. I wouldn't worry about them, only one I encountered more than once is the DTS 96/24 found on old audio DVDs, it's a complete joke as it's not even lossless and the only thing it does is add things you cannot hear (it extends 48khz to 96khz, that's all.) while making the files bigger (but it still requires something like lav + Arcsoft dll to decode) There are other types of DTS tracks (DTS-ES and other funky names) but AFAIK all of them are lossy and really rare (probably because there is nothing good to say about them ). LAV filters work with several players including free ones such as Media Player Classic but AFAIK Windows Media Player is not supported. dll (I have several backups of it myself if you need it) This product is now discontinued but it's not too hard to find this. The only "free" solution for now is to use LAV audio filters with the dtsdecoder.dll from Arcsoft TMT (TotalMediaTheater, a paid product but with a free demo with which you can/could grab the. There is a open source project but it seems to be going really slow (if it's not frozen altogether.). Most players (including free ones) have no problem at all with lossy DTS, but DTS-HD requires a decoder and there is currently no free decoder available. Windows Media Player does not (at least by default) support DTS-HD so it will only output this DTS core if you feed it a lossless DTS-HD track.ĭTS 750 > that's just a lossy DTS track that never had the -HD extension in the first place (a bit more aggressively compressed than the 1536 one). Requires a DTS-HD decoder (on a PC, it's a bit tricky if you stick to free media players).ĭTS 1536 > this is the lossy version of the same track, called the "core" because it has an attached -HD extension that turns it into a lossless track if the player can decode it. An exact copy of the original master, it's common to have this on blu-rays. I'm no DTS expert but I can clarify a few things :ĭTS-HD 3961 kbps > that's lossless audio (and variable bit rate), like FLAC, True HD etc.
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