This episode is Part 2 of our conversation with software engineer Drew Shapiro. If you stumbled into this episode before hearing Part 1, I recommend going one episode back and listening to that one first...it will be kind of hard to connect the dots of where we land in this episode without hearing Part 1 first.

In this part, we continue to analyze the magic (aka science) of how sound technology works. We continue the meta journey of how my voice is reaching your ears, and talk about how digital compression works. We even played a few examples to demonstrate compression, including playing the Bach violin solo of our intro at different bit rates to hear the effect that removing data has on music.

Enjoy!


**This episode contains video which you can watch on our Youtube Channel**


Timestamps (Clickable on website):[03:15] Sampling and sending information in packets[07:15] Continuing the podcast journey of how our voices reach your ears[12:22] A wav file becoming an mp3 and a side by side comparison to show what frequency removal does to sound[17:05] Our Bach violin partita intro music side by side at different compression levels[28:15] How our ears pick up sound[30:53] How you download a podcast and convert the digital information back to analog sound waves[33:30] A summary of the podcast journey from our voices to your ears[37:30] "Perfect is the enemy of good enough" —Balancing the quest for perfect sound with pragmatism[41:32] Closing thoughts

Links Discussed:Veritasium anechoic chamberBarbershop pole visual illusionShepard Tone audio illusionCan You Trust Your Ears? (Audio Illusions)Do You Hear "Yanny" or "Laurel"? (SOLVED with SCIENCE)Electron microscope slow-motion video of vinyl LPThe Truth About Vinyl - Vinyl vs. Digital


Support Us:

You can always support us by leaving a rating or review in your podcasting app. You can also share our episodes with friends on social media.

But it does take a lot of time to put together a podcast, maintain a website, and write new content every week. So if you would like to support us in a more substantial way, consider making a donation through the PayPal buttons on our website:

https://exploringkodawari.blog/donation/

Follow Us:Our Website/BlogNewsletterTwitter:

This episode is Part 2 of our conversation with software engineer Drew Shapiro. If you stumbled into this episode before hearing Part 1, I recommend going one episode back and listening to that one first...it will be kind of hard to connect the dots of where we land in this episode without hearing Part 1 first.

In this part, we continue to analyze the magic (aka science) of how sound technology works. We continue the meta journey of how my voice is reaching your ears, and talk about how digital compression works. We even played a few examples to demonstrate compression, including playing the Bach violin solo of our intro at different bit rates to hear the effect that removing data has on music.

Enjoy!


**This episode contains video which you can watch on our Youtube Channel**


Timestamps (Clickable on website):[03:15] Sampling and sending information in packets[07:15] Continuing the podcast journey of how our voices reach your ears[12:22] A wav file becoming an mp3 and a side by side comparison to show what frequency removal does to sound[17:05] Our Bach violin partita intro music side by side at different compression levels[28:15] How our ears pick up sound[30:53] How you download a podcast and convert the digital information back to analog sound waves[33:30] A summary of the podcast journey from our voices to your ears[37:30] "Perfect is the enemy of good enough" —Balancing the quest for perfect sound with pragmatism[41:32] Closing thoughts

Links Discussed:Veritasium anechoic chamberBarbershop pole visual illusionShepard Tone audio illusionCan You Trust Your Ears? (Audio Illusions)Do You Hear "Yanny" or "Laurel"? (SOLVED with SCIENCE)Electron microscope slow-motion video of vinyl LPThe Truth About Vinyl - Vinyl vs. Digital


Support Us:

You can always support us by leaving a rating or review in your podcasting app. You can also share our episodes with friends on social media.

But it does take a lot of time to put together a podcast, maintain a website, and write new content every week. So if you would like to support us in a more substantial way, consider making a donation through the PayPal buttons on our website:

https://exploringkodawari.blog/donation/

Follow Us:Our Website/BlogNewsletterTwitter: @EKodawariInstagram: @exploringkodawariFacebook: facebook.com/ExploringKodawari

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