Sentences with phrase «256kbps aac»

For $ 24.99 a year, users can match any of the songs on their hard drive into the cloud to be redownloadable on any iOS or Mac device in 256Kbps AAC CD quality, even if their original track was of much lower quality.
Apple Music files are sent to your device at 256kbps AAC, similar to the iTunes Match service.
Better still, the iTunes Store offers DRM - free 256kbps AAC files; as such, you're always getting a high - quality download whether you're listening on your iPhone or downloading to a new Mac.
This status means that Apple has scanned and uploaded this track from your library to its servers; when you re-download it, it'll show up in its original format — 128kbps mp3, 256kbps AAC, however you uploaded it.
While the Apple Music catalog and iTunes Store catalogs have similar songs within them, they are vastly different beasts: iTunes encodes all its tracks as DRM - free 256kbps AAC files; Apple Music files are 256kbps, but they're protected AAC files and require an active Apple Music subscription for them to play.

Not exact matches

Better yet, it automatically converts low - quality music files to AAC 256Kbps, meaning some of your tunes might end up sounding better than the originals.
We create AAC 256Kbps versions of songs that are encoded in ALAC, WAV, or AIFF formats and add the AAC version to iCloud Music Library.
If you have tracks that aren't in Apple Music's library — say, personal recordings, for instance — they will be uploaded as - is to your iCloud Music Library, though songs encoded in ALAC, WAV, or AIFF will be uploaded as AAC 256kbps files for easier storage.
To save space and upload time, any track in your library that's also available in the iTunes Music Store catalog will «match» to the catalog version; this means that when you play that track on your iPhone or another Mac, you'll get the iTunes Music Store version (a DRM - free, 256kbps - quality AAC file, for those wondering), rather than your original file.
Users can stream or download these tracks from iCloud Music Library as long as their Apple Music subscription remains active; downloaded tracks will either show up as a 256kbps matched DRM - free AAC file or an AAC - converted file of tracks you uploaded.
This status means that you've purchased these songs from the iTunes Store catalog; when you re-download them on any other device (up to 10), it'll show up as a 256kbps Purchased DRM - free AAC (m4a) file.
In setting window, you can choose output format (MP3, AAC, WAV or FLAC) and output quality (320kbps, medium 256kbps, low128kbps).
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