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Dec 29, 2012 10:49 AM in response to tridentinecanonby ed2345,What's strange is that I have (so far) purchased one other 24-bit digital download, 2nd Law by the Muse. When I imported these songs into iTunes, I had no issues uploading/matching them with iTunes Match.
Tridentine,
Are you sure you had "no issues"? If iTunes Match was working as specified, one of two things would have happened.
- If it could match the track, the one in the cloud would be the store copy in AAC/256 format.
- If it could not match, it would use your copy, but first transcode it to AAC/256. (See details in this doc: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4914 )
Either way, you lost the benefit of the 24-bit hi-def audio.
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Dec 29, 2012 11:08 AM in response to ed2345by tridentinecanon,I never lost the benefit of the 24-bit audio because I still have the original audio files stored in my iTunes library on my Mac Pro.
I realize that when I play the songs from iTunes Match on my iPhone/iPad/Mac Mini/Macbook Air that quality is the 256kbps iTunes STore standard (duh!).
What I want is for iTunes Match to do what it ought to do: keep my 24-bit songs on my harddrive, so that I can play them in that format on my home stereo connected to my Mac Pro, and make 256kbps copies of them available in the cloud, so that I can access and play them on my other devices.
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Dec 29, 2012 11:24 AM in response to tridentinecanonby ed2345,★HelpfulTridentine,
OK, good, since you are only using the Cloud copies for your other devices, and are not counting on them as a backup of your music.
I saw nothing in the documentation that indicates that 24-bit files are not eligible. You may want to try another 24-bit file or two to see if iTunes 10 vs 11 is really the issue. If it appears there is a bug, report it to the iTunes Feedback page.