Is it too much to hope?

I’ve just installed ver­sion 7 of iTunes, and for the last few min­utes, the sta­tus win­dow has been list­ing all the music in my library along with the words, “Deter­min­ing Gap­less Play­back Information.”

This has been my biggest prob­lem with dig­i­tal music play­ers for years. The MP3 for­mat in par­tic­u­lar has poor gran­u­lar­i­ty. The files are lim­it­ed in length to incre­ments of some­thing like two-tenths of a sec­ond. So play­ing one next to anoth­er inevitably leads to a pause between the songs. For many albums or shuf­fle play this is hard­ly not­i­ca­ble, but for “album rock” where one song flows seam­less­ly into the next, or live music, or any num­ber of oth­er com­mon appli­ca­tions, this gap is a very not­i­ca­ble annoyance.

I’ve griped for years that this would be a very easy prob­lem to fix. All that would be nec­es­sary is to add some meta­da­ta to the file telling it where to cut off. A 24-bit num­ber would pro­vide for track lengths up to more than four and a half hours in incre­ments of thou­sandths of a sec­ond. Instead the mak­ers of dig­i­tal music play­ers (both portable and desk­top ver­sions) have let us live with this gap between songs that quite frankly ruins cer­tain albums. The best Apple had done up until yes­ter­day was intro­duce a half of a sec­ond of cross­fade between adja­cent tracks. Some­what bet­ter, as the gap is not audi­ble, but the missed beat in music that’s sup­posed to flow seam­less­ly from track to track is still jarring.

I’m now wait­ing for this “gap­less play­back infor­ma­tion” to fin­ish updat­ing. It may be too much to hope for, but I’ve got my fin­gers crossed that iTunes has final­ly risen to 1983 stan­dards of dig­i­tal audio.

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