Apple's Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) Now Open Source

Posted by: totemphile on 31 October 2011

Came across this piece of 'news' today:

 

"On MacOSForge, Apple has announced that they are releasing the Apple Lossless Audio Codec as an open source project:

The Apple Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) is a lossless audio codec developed by Apple and deployed on all of its platforms and devices for some years now. Apple is making the Apple Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) available as an open source project. Full details can be found on the Apple Lossless Audio Codec project page.

The Apple Lossless Audio Codec is a similar to other "lossless" codecs such as FLAC which offer audio compression without any loss in audio information. ALAC is said to compress files only by "about half" as compared to the originals.

Formats such as MP3 and AAC are considered "lossy" and result in much greater compression but at the cost of some fidelity. The main advantage of using ALAC over competing lossless formats is that ALAC is supported by all of Apple's iPods and iOS devices. The format had already been reverse engineered prior to this release, but this opens the door to even more products supporting both ALAC creation and playback.

The project has been released under the Apache license."

 

Source: macrumors.com

 

 

 

So what do you guys make of this, is it a big deal? Are there any advantages other than ALAC being supported by more devices in future? Anything in it for the Naim & Apple owners amongst us? As far as I understand Naim servers and streamers are already able to play back ALAC.

 

 

Cheers

tp

Posted on: 31 October 2011 by pcstockton

exhaustive(ing) discussion here:

 

https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...nt/10999432189684399

Posted on: 31 October 2011 by totemphile

Great, thanks!

 

 

Richard - Could you delete this thread please? Didn't see the other one was up already...

 

Thanks

tp