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#1
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What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio
programs! Thanks all! Ray |
#2
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PCM = Pulse Code Modulated
PCM is the format of the actual audio data WAV is a storage medium for audio data -- a file format. WAV files can contain various data formats -- PCM being one of them. Perhaps you have RAW data files -- in that case use my free utility sdTwoWav to convert them to WAV files. Rail -- Recording Engineer/Software Developer Rail Jon Rogut Software http://www.railjonrogut.com "itemyar" wrote in message ... What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! Thanks all! Ray |
#3
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"Rail Jon Rogut" writes:
PCM = Pulse Code Modulated Close. Pulse Code Modulation. -- % Randy Yates % "She's sweet on Wagner-I think she'd die for Beethoven. %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % She love the way Puccini lays down a tune, and %%% 919-577-9882 % Verdi's always creepin' from her room." %%%% % "Rockaria", *A New World Record*, ELO http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#4
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![]() "itemyar" wrote in message ... What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! Most (all ?) WAV files are linear PCM. Don't know what application creates files with a suffix PCM, but you should be able to load back and resave as WAV without losing anything. geoff |
#5
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![]() itemyar wrote: What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! PCM is the method of converting analog voltage to a binary number. WAV is a file format that Microsoft defined for storing PCM-encoded audio. If you're having trouble opening audio files, it may be because whatever program you're opening them with cannot accommodate the word length of sample rate, or there's something in the header (non-audio) portion of the file that your program doens't like. Try another program. |
#6
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
itemyar wrote: What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! PCM is the method of converting analog voltage to a binary number. "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. At some level, ALL audio files are "PCM". You need more detailed information about the file than just "PCM". Is the file name actually "whatever.pcm"? Where did it come from? What software produced it? What does it look like when you open it in a text editor? http://filext.com/detaillist.php?extdetail=pcm |
#7
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![]() Richard Crowley wrote: "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. PCM has been around longer than marketing-speak and is a perfectly legitimate engineering term. |
#8
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"Mike Rivers" wrote...
Richard Crowley wrote: "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. PCM has been around longer than marketing-speak and is a perfectly legitimate engineering term. "PCM" originated at Bell Labs where digitizaton of audio was first exploited. "Pulse-Code Modulation" was the (new at the time) method of transmitting audio by sending digital samples of the waveform. We agree that it started out as a perfectly legitimate engineering term. However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". I believe that a Google Groups archival search will reveal that every time it comes up here, it is in the context of something like this OP's problem where it merely confuses the issue of what kind of file he is actually dealing with. |
#9
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PCM is the method of converting analog voltage to a binary number.
No, it is only one type of such a conversion. And not all digital is binary. Most forms aren't. Are we going to go into this again? I hope not. |
#10
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However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of
"PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". If only because it's the most-common format. Some formats -- such as dbx 700 and SACD DSD -- are not PCM (except in the broadest sense of "pulse-code"). |
#11
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![]() Richard Crowley wrote: We agree that it started out as a perfectly legitimate engineering term. However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". Yeah, I guess this will need to go into the Contemporary Lexicon of Technical Terminology Misuse. PCM - (1) Any digital audio storage format that isn't MP3. (2) CD quality. |
#12
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PCM files have no header and are uncompressed . Wav files can contain PCM
data but they are RIFF files with specific header/packet construct. "itemyar" wrote in message ... What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! Thanks all! Ray |
#13
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Richard Crowley wrote:
At some level, ALL audio files are "PCM". You need more detailed DSD? |
#14
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Richard Crowley wrote:
However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". You continue to maintain? Digital means PCM? |
#15
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"Dr. Dolittle" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: At some level, ALL audio files are "PCM". You need more detailed DSD? More marketing-speak. A newly-minted, fancy TLA for what had a perfectly find technical name/description, "1-bit sigma-delta encoding". It has been around for many years before the DSD name was stuck on it. Seems like more evidence that "PCM" has no fixed, generally-accepted definition anymore. |
#16
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: We agree that it started out as a perfectly legitimate engineering term. However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". Yeah, I guess this will need to go into the Contemporary Lexicon of Technical Terminology Misuse. PCM - (1) Any digital audio storage format that isn't MP3. (2) CD quality. http://www.google.com/search?num=20&... q=define:PCM Pulse code modulation -- a standard method of encoding analog audio signals in digital form. www.digitalhymnal.org/glossary_m-z.html Pulse Code Modulation. A method of encoding an audio signal in digital format. www.56k.com/glossary.shtml Pulse Coded Modulation. Transmission of analog information in digital form through sampling and encoding the samples with a fixed number of bits. www.cxrlarus.com/assets/glossary.html PCM stands for Pulse Code Modulation. This is a digital process for encoding signals. www.songstuff.com/glossary/P Pulse Code Modulation, the most common method of encoding an analogue audio signal into a digital bit stream. http://www.multimediadirector.com/he...lossary_op.htm Pulse Code Modulation. A widely used method of converting analogue telephony signals into digital form. www.scottygroup.com/glossary A scheme by which an analog signal is sampled and converted to a digital signal for transmission. connectors.tycoelectronics.com/glossary/glossary-p.stm ad nauseum.... |
#17
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"itemyar" writes:
What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! Sound can be encoded in different formats. A few formats would be: PCM, ADPCM, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, AMR-WB, etc. A .wav file can contain any of these formats, but your software application(s) may only be able to read certain formats. "PCM" is the most basic format for the .wav file. PCM (pulse code modulation) is time-quantized, amplitude-quantized, multi-bit digital audio (e.g., 16-bit stereo samples, 44.1 kHz sample rate). Other formats need to be "decoded" into PCM before you can play them on your standard soundcard, and that is precisely where any specific audio software application may come up short, i.e., it may not support all formats possible in a .wav file. You might give the free, open-source audio analysis tool "Audacity" a try on the WAV file in question (PS: call them WAV files, not PCM files): http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ -- % Randy Yates % "Remember the good old 1980's, when %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % things were so uncomplicated?" %%% 919-577-9882 % 'Ticket To The Moon' %%%% % *Time*, Electric Light Orchestra http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#18
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![]() Richard Crowley wrote: Pulse code modulation -- a standard method of encoding analog audio signals in digital form. .. . . . . ad nauseum.... None of which probably means anything to the original poster. Fun, though. |
#19
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![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dolittle" wrote ... Richard Crowley wrote: At some level, ALL audio files are "PCM". You need more detailed DSD? More marketing-speak. A newly-minted, fancy TLA for what had a perfectly find technical name/description, "1-bit sigma-delta encoding". It has been around for many years before the DSD name was stuck on it. Seems like more evidence that "PCM" has no fixed, generally-accepted definition anymore. It does with me. I can't help it if others misuse it. - Gary Rosen |
#20
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"Gary Rosen" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote ... Seems like more evidence that "PCM" has no fixed, generally-accepted definition anymore. It does with me. I can't help it if others misuse it. That's exactly the problem. In just the Google definition page you will find several conflicting "definitions". Current (mis-)use has rendered it practically meaningless and even outright confusing to many users. This is not the first (or even 10th) time someone has come here confused about what "PCM" means. |
#21
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"Richard Crowley" writes:
"Gary Rosen" wrote ... "Richard Crowley" wrote ... Seems like more evidence that "PCM" has no fixed, generally-accepted definition anymore. It does with me. I can't help it if others misuse it. That's exactly the problem. In just the Google definition page you will find several conflicting "definitions". The "net" is not the authority in this or almost any other matter. Current (mis-)use has rendered it practically meaningless and even outright confusing to many users. This is not the first (or even 10th) time someone has come here confused about what "PCM" means. An authoritative source is [jayant], which states A PCM coder is nothing more than a waveform sampler followed by an amplitude quantizer. In other words, it is a time- and amplitude-quantized signal. Time-quantized means the signal is discrete-time; amplitude-quantized means the signal contains a finite number of levels, usually represented by a set of N bits. --Randy Yates @BOOK{jayant, title = "{Digital Coding Of Waveforms}", author = "{N.S.~Jayant, Peter~Noll}", publisher = "Prentice Hall", year = "1984"} -- % Randy Yates % "Rollin' and riding and slippin' and %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % sliding, it's magic." %%% 919-577-9882 % %%%% % 'Living' Thing', *A New World Record*, ELO http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#22
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![]() Richard Crowley wrote: "Mike Rivers" wrote ... itemyar wrote: What is the difference? I have trouble opening PCM files with various audio programs! PCM is the method of converting analog voltage to a binary number. "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. That's just wrong. The acronym for Pulse Code Modulation came out of the DSP community long before it had any influence on the "normal" people market. It's a technical classification, not marketing-speak. At some level, ALL audio files are "PCM". You need more detailed information about the file than just "PCM". That's just wrong. DSD is not PCM nor is MP3 or most other compressed modes. That you can transform one to the other doesn't make them all PCM. E.g. you can also transform analog to PCM and back. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#23
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"Randy Yates" wrote ...
An authoritative source is [jayant], which states A PCM coder is nothing more than a waveform sampler followed by an amplitude quantizer. In other words, it is a time- and amplitude-quantized signal. Time-quantized means the signal is discrete-time; amplitude-quantized means the signal contains a finite number of levels, usually represented by a set of N bits. And that definition applies to every kind of digital audio format, including the compressed ones. Taking us back around the circle to my original point that "PCM" synonymous with "digital". |
#24
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"Bob Cain" wrote ...
That's just wrong..... That's just wrong...... You are just demonstrating my allegation that "PCM" has become useless and even actively confusing as a description of a file format or codec. |
#25
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"Richard Crowley" writes:
"Randy Yates" wrote ... An authoritative source is [jayant], which states A PCM coder is nothing more than a waveform sampler followed by an amplitude quantizer. In other words, it is a time- and amplitude-quantized signal. Time-quantized means the signal is discrete-time; amplitude-quantized means the signal contains a finite number of levels, usually represented by a set of N bits. And that definition applies to every kind of digital audio format, including the compressed ones. Not true. For example, DSD is not a simple amplitude-quantized signal. Taking us back around the circle to my original point that "PCM" synonymous with "digital". I'm sorry you're confused, but the meaning and the definitions are clear. It might help if you go to the library, check out some books, and read up on the subjects of quantization and sampling. -- % Randy Yates % "How's life on earth? %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % ... What is it worth?" %%% 919-577-9882 % 'Mission (A World Record)', %%%% % *A New World Record*, ELO http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#26
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![]() Richard Crowley wrote: "Bob Cain" wrote ... That's just wrong..... That's just wrong...... You are just demonstrating my allegation that "PCM" has become useless and even actively confusing as a description of a file format or codec. Own your own confusion; don't presume others share it. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#27
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"Bob Cain" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: "Bob Cain" wrote ... That's just wrong..... That's just wrong...... You are just demonstrating my allegation that "PCM" has become useless and even actively confusing as a description of a file format or codec. Own your own confusion; don't presume others share it. This very thread (and dozens like it) exist because others share it. |
#28
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![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Mike Rivers" wrote... Richard Crowley wrote: "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. PCM has been around longer than marketing-speak and is a perfectly legitimate engineering term. "PCM" originated at Bell Labs where digitizaton of audio was first exploited. "Pulse-Code Modulation" was the (new at the time) method of transmitting audio by sending digital samples of the waveform. We agree that it started out as a perfectly legitimate engineering term. However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". Not exactly. The think that makes PCM distinct is that the pulses have different meaning. Here's an orthodox view of the classical terminology that defines some relevant terms: http://www.co.umist.ac.uk/misc/ct211...M_Site/why.htm |
#29
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Richard Crowley wrote:
Own your own confusion; don't presume others share it. This very thread (and dozens like it) exist because others share it. No, they may be confused, but they don't share YOUR confusion. |
#30
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I think Mike nailed the definition of PCM and WAV. Explanation makes
perfect sense for those who want an accurate technical meaning of what the terms mean. -- "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Mike Rivers" wrote... Richard Crowley wrote: "PCM" is a fancy marketing-speak TLA (three-letter acronym) which means "digital" to normal people. PCM has been around longer than marketing-speak and is a perfectly legitimate engineering term. "PCM" originated at Bell Labs where digitizaton of audio was first exploited. "Pulse-Code Modulation" was the (new at the time) method of transmitting audio by sending digital samples of the waveform. We agree that it started out as a perfectly legitimate engineering term. However, I continue to maintain that MODERN usage of "PCM" is indistinguishable from the common word "digital". I believe that a Google Groups archival search will reveal that every time it comes up here, it is in the context of something like this OP's problem where it merely confuses the issue of what kind of file he is actually dealing with. |
#31
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![]() bixby wrote: I think Mike nailed the definition of PCM and WAV. Explanation makes perfect sense for those who want an accurate technical meaning of what the terms mean. Except that someone correctly corrected me that the code isn't always binary. But it is always a digital representation of an analog parameter. |