None of those 4 are more efficient than the other... but those are not MP3 files. I'm not sure how he defines quality of MP3s - could be referring to the sound itself and the quality of those sounds (ie. 44KHz vs. 22KHz etc.), or just how "good" it sounds compared to for example midi.. in that case, the 4 formats Axel mentioned should be used. Which one of those 4 are used really depends on what program the music maker makes the music with.
n/a
DaVince This fool just HAD to have a custom rating
Registered 04/09/2004
Points 7998
15th May, 2007 at 02:20:19 -
Ogg is almost exactly like mp3, only it's an open format (no patent, so free use). You'd best use that, it's as easy as converting your mp3s to oggs.
Of course there are modules and MIDIs, but those work with instrument commands (and in modules' case, custom instruments), not one big waveform.