iPod help needed...


I recently picked up a 40G iPod and am in the process of importing some cd's of mine.

I am using the Apple lossless compression, thinking that would give me the best, near cd quality sound for playback.

Am I correct in using this choice?

Also, if my calculations are somewhat accurate it seems this compression will only allow for about 100 or 110 cd's of music. Yes, that is perhaps 1,500 to 1,700 songs, however that is a FAR cry from 70,000 songs as advertised.

Any advice greatly appreciated!
audiofankj
I agree with Artmaltman... consider your needs.

If lossless is really important, than I'd suggest creating playlists, and managing your CD collection manually. Do you really need access to all 110 CDs at once? Put on as much as you can, and change it up as needed. iTunes is a great management tool for your digital music.

Also, can't remember where I saw it but the 128-bit AAC is actually supposed to sound superior to higher bit-rate AAC.
Thanks for all of the responses. I posted the questions just after I received the iPod... easier to ask than read the maual, eh? :) Anyhow, I didn't realize you can load many albums into iTunes and then "select" which artists, playlists, etc. to load onto the iPod. Very nice. Also, it seems even with lossless format I will be able to fit about 1,400 songs. That should be quite enough, knowing I can cycle through various artists from the iTunes database I have loaded onto the computer.

I am still trying to compare the AAC versus the Lossless format...

has anyone else tried Grado SR-325's on an iPod yet? *grin* you are in for a treat!
I have encoded most of my collection in AAC 320 kbps and play it through the dock to a Musical Fidelity X-Can v3 into Sennheiser 570 headphones. Good for listening at work!
Apple Lossless is a great way to keep file sizes down (I currently have about 160gb of AIFF raw on an external FW disk), but I would recommend AAC 320 as well. The DAC and op-amps in The iPod are QUITE good, but not so good that most would hear a dramatic difference.

I'm also using an X-CAN v3 with some grados and love it...

The way I see things is, you're dumbing it down to some kind of 1/8" plug to RCA, plus the line-out on the dock, so with those kind of limitations, going WAY overkill is silly - unless you are storing music at full AIFF or Apple Lossless, going out via a USB or FireWire cable to an external device with SPDIF to a DAC etc... which I have admittedly done, but that kinda defeats the purpose of having a PORTABLE music player, eh? :D
Plus, I forgot to mention in my 320 AAC endorsement - in addition to allowing FAR greater storage capacity, the smaller 320 AAC files will greatly increase battery life (no big deal if listening thru a doc tho). The RAM buffer in the device is only but so big, if the (Lossless) files are too big to hold it in its entirety, the disk will be reading constantly, which is not only a draw on the battery but more wear-and-tear on the whole unit. It's a very high quality portable, treat it as such, not as a music server. If you want a portable unit that holds a LOT of music, an external firewire disk from LaCie such as the Big Disk (up to 1TB!!) or the sexy, small but rugged "Designed by Porsche" ones (such as the 160 i have) would be more suitable for your needs.