Obviously an interesting exercise for retro Macs is to recreate the experience of doing more modern computing using old technology. In this case, how did we create MP3s at the beginning of the streaming era?
On an old CD archive of stuff I had from 1998, I found a folder containing a freeware MP3 encoder and separate player (MacAmp). I also found a guide on how to do encoding, since I thought ahead, 26 years ago on how I might use the apps, long after I'd forgotten about them! The guide's at the end.
I imported Enya's WaterMark title track from a proper Enya CD of mine. It's 2.5 minutes long and took about 24 minutes to encode at 44.1kHz Stereo! Crazy slow!

At the end I had a 2.5MB file (about 10% of the .AIFF track).

It wasn't hard to play it back on MacAmp (though I had to create a playlist first... of that one song!)

Amazingly, the PB 1400c/166 didn't grind to a halt during playback ;-) !
On an old CD archive of stuff I had from 1998, I found a folder containing a freeware MP3 encoder and separate player (MacAmp). I also found a guide on how to do encoding, since I thought ahead, 26 years ago on how I might use the apps, long after I'd forgotten about them! The guide's at the end.
I imported Enya's WaterMark title track from a proper Enya CD of mine. It's 2.5 minutes long and took about 24 minutes to encode at 44.1kHz Stereo! Crazy slow!

At the end I had a 2.5MB file (about 10% of the .AIFF track).

It wasn't hard to play it back on MacAmp (though I had to create a playlist first... of that one song!)

Amazingly, the PB 1400c/166 didn't grind to a halt during playback ;-) !


