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Old 01.28.2011, 12:34 AM   #3
terminal pharmacy
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Location: Australia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nicfit
What I meant is how you can be sure the file they "get" is the same one you "send" (you=not just you, but anyone who may be afraid of potential corruption/glitches/wathever in a digital file).
As far as I know, the only way to find out for sure is a bit for bit (bit per bit sounded a bit too "latin" , dunno if it's the correct terminology..) comparison...
See where I'm headed?

bit for bit comparison = proof that 2 files are identical=you know your file is the same the client got

wav vs flac (encoded from that wav + decoded back to wav) bit comparison = proof that flac is actually lossless, in every aspect (again, forgive my lame lexicon tonight)

This does not mean you can't hear differences etc (see "bottom line" in my previous post, I need some sleep now...).

A lot of the times when recording gigs, I advise the client to supply me with a hard drive which I can slot into the hard disk recorders we use and the we check the recordings before sending the drive.

On the occasion when I do recordings for clients interstate and the want to be sent the copies electronically we do all of the regular checks and then email the file and post a CD. The CDs we can easily check and if the emailed file is corrupted then we re-bounce and resend. This does not happen a lot though only for clients usually that give very little notice and one of the many bosses I contract for says yes to a last minute gig.

In the end, if their ears don't pick up on anything we don't hear back.
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