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Glitch is a genre of electronic music that emerged in the 1990s which is distinguished by the deliberate use of glitch-based audio media and other sonic artifacts. [1]The glitching sounds featured in glitch tracks usually come from audio recording device or digital electronics malfunctions, such as CD skipping, electric hum, digital or analog distortion, circuit bending, bit-rate reduction ...
Various software, firmware, and hardware components may add up to a substantial delay associated with starting playback of a track. If not accounted for, the listener is left waiting in silence as the player fetches the next file (see harddisk access time), updates metadata, decodes the whole first block, before having any data to feed the hardware buffer.
Module file (MOD music, tracker music) is a family of music file formats originating from the MOD file format on Amiga systems used in the late 1980s. Those who produce these files (using the software called music trackers ) and listen to them form the worldwide MOD scene, [ 1 ] a part of the demoscene subculture.
Winamp supports music playback using MP3, MIDI, MOD, MPEG-1 audio layers 1 and 2, AAC, M4A, FLAC, WAV, and WMA. Winamp was one of the first widely used music players on Windows to support playback of Ogg Vorbis by default. [23] It supports gapless playback for MP3 and AAC and ReplayGain for volume leveling across tracks.
The Rio also spawned one of the first Digital Music service providers (ASP or SaaS Cloud Service), RioPort. RioPort was the first digital music service to license secure, single-track commercial downloads from major record labels. [2] The Rio PMP300 was supplied with a copy of the "Music Match" software for managing the user's MP3 library.
S. S1 MP3 player; Samsung M800 Instinct; Samsung YEPP; Samsung YP-R0; Samsung YP-R1; SanDisk portable media players; Sansa c200 series; Sansa e200 series; Sansa Fuze
Compression artifacts may intentionally be used as a visual style, sometimes known as "glitch art". Rosa Menkman's glitch art makes use of compression artifacts, [16] particularly the discrete cosine transform blocks (DCT blocks) found in most digital media data compression formats such as JPEG digital images and MP3 digital audio. [2]
Playback controls on a CD player. Control symbols on a Sony Betamax Portable. In digital electronics , analogue electronics and entertainment , the user interface may include media controls , transport controls or player controls , to enact and change or adjust the process of video playback, audio playback, and alike.