FLAC

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(Added provisional mimetypes, based on https://wiki.xiph.org/MIME_Types_and_File_Extensions#.flac_-_audio.2Fflac and Wikipedia)
(Added reference to support of F:LAC by Mozilla Firefox)
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* [http://www.winamp.com/ Winamp] (Windows, commercial)
 
* [http://www.winamp.com/ Winamp] (Windows, commercial)
  
For more software products which support FLAC, see the [http://flac.sourceforge.net/links.html FLAC links page]
+
FLAC is also natively supported by Mozilla's Firefox browser, starting from Firefox 51. For more software products which support FLAC, see the [http://flac.sourceforge.net/links.html FLAC links page]
  
 
== Specifications ==
 
== Specifications ==
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* [http://www.dustbury.com/archives/17227 Commentary about Audi car not playing high-bitrate FLACs]
 
* [http://www.dustbury.com/archives/17227 Commentary about Audi car not playing high-bitrate FLACs]
 
* [http://dericed.com/2013/flac-in-the-archives/ FLAC in the archives]
 
* [http://dericed.com/2013/flac-in-the-archives/ FLAC in the archives]
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* [https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Supported_media_formats Mozilla Firefox supported media formats list]
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* [http://www.ghacks.net/2016/08/30/firefox-51-flac-audio-codec-support/ Firefox 51: FLAC Audio Codec Support]

Revision as of 10:34, 5 September 2016

File Format
Name FLAC
Ontology
Extension(s) .flac
MIME Type(s) audio/x-flac,audio/flac
PRONOM fmt/279

FLAC is a Free Lossless Audio Codec. It can encode audio with a PCM bit resolution up to 32 bits per sample and sampling rates up to 640 kHz. FLAC-encoded audio is usually found either in a native container (which has the extension .flac), or in an Ogg container (when it's known as OggFLAC).

The format is open and royalty-free. The reference implementation is cross-platform and dual-licensed, command-line utilities (e.g. encoder, decoder and metadata editor) use GNU GPL and code libraries use BSD.

FLAC is suitable for archiving for many reasons:

  • open format
  • support for metadata tagging
  • lossless (no generation loss if you need to convert to another format)
  • disk size effective (audio is typically reduced to 50-60% of original size)
  • data integrity
  • error resistant (bit faults are contained within a frame, typically a fraction of a second)

Contents

Playback

Hardware

Many home stereo and portable hardware music players support the FLAC format. See the FLAC links page for an up-to-date list.

Software

A number of popular audio players support the FLAC format, including:

FLAC is also natively supported by Mozilla's Firefox browser, starting from Firefox 51. For more software products which support FLAC, see the FLAC links page

Specifications

Links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
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