Nokia N73-1 Cell Phone User Manual


 
Media applications
39
Copyright © 2007 Nokia. All rights reserved.
Change album art
1 Select a song.
2 Select Options > Album art.
3 Select Options > Change.
4 Scroll through images in the gallery of your device,
and select Select visualisation:.
5 To restore the original album art, select Restore
original.
About encoded audio
Applications like Windows Media Player, and Nokia Audio
Manager (included in the Nokia PC Suite) encode audio
files with codecs such as WMA or MP3 to save storage
space. The encoding is done by removing those parts of the
audio signal that are not audible or only barely audible by
human ear.
Regardless of the encoder and codec quality, the sound
quality of the resulting file is not as good as the original.
The basic codecs supported by this device are AAC, WMA,
and MP3. All of these have different variations.
Bitrates
When encoding audio, the quality of the resulting sound
depends on the sample rate and bit rate used for the
encoding. Sample rate is expressed as thousands of
samples per second (kHz), and for CD music the
sample rate is fixed at 44.1 kHz. Bit rate is expressed
as kilobits per second (Kbps). The higher the bitrate,
the better the sound quality.
The required quality level may depend on your demands,
the headsets used, and the surrounding noise. For MP3s a
bitrate between 128 and 192 Kbps usually gives results
good enough for listening to pop music with your device.
WMA or AAC generally gives a similar result as MP3 with
one step lower bitrate (96-160 Kbps). Variations of AAC,
such as AAC+ and enhanced AAC+ (eAAC+) provide CD
quality audio at bitrates as low as 48 Kbps. Classical music
and music with nuances usually require a higher bitrate
than basic pop music.
For speech or other sources where the quality of the sound
is less important than saving storage space, you can use
bitrates between 8 and 64 Kbps. At low bitrates WMA or
AAC generally gives better results than MP3.
Variable bitrate
Your device also supports variable bitrate (VBR). Variable
bitrate means that the bit rate of the encoding varies with
the complexity of the encoded material. When using VBR,
the encoding is optimized to preserve a constant audio
quality throughout the track, rather than losing quality for
complex music sections as with constant bitrate (CBR)
encoding.