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Irrelevant is a strong word, and I very much doubt it. The only reason for making this open source was for devices to be able to support this more. However FLAC has been open source for quite a while - consequently most device makers willing to make the effort to support loss-less audio codec already did so with FLAC. Support for ALAC will mostly come for these devices. Conversely, I see no reason for any device to support ALAC and not FLAC.

According to Wikipedia, FLAC is more efficient in encoding/decoding speeds - with same compression ratio. This translates to it being more power efficient.

Lastly this news will matter to only a few audiophiles who are also Apple geeks.

Making something open source is a welcome gesture, but I hope Apple will do this for other items which will have better reaching consequences.



Conversely, I see no reason for any device to support ALAC and not FLAC.

Isnt this implemented in silicon (or atleast implemented as some DSP-specific library) ? AFAIK that costs money.

Today, if you wanted a lossless player, that player had to have FLAC - which was taken from a commercial vendor like Tensilica [1]. But now that ALAC is an alternative, why would I even try to spend more money and also add FLAC ?

Plus, it is reasonably trivial to convert all FLAC to ALAC [2]

[1] http://www.tensilica.com/products/audio/audio-codecs/flac.ht... or http://www.tensilica.com/products/audio/audio-codecs.htm (no ALAC)

[2] http://www.dbpoweramp.com/dmc.htm




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