Vorbis was created on 2000-05-08.
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iTunes will not play ogg vorbis files. You would need to either convert your OGG files to MP3 or AAC to play them in iTunes or you would need to download and install a player like VLC Player in order to play the ogg vorbis files without converting them. Similarly, ogg vorbis OGM files would need to be played in VLC Player.
OGG stands for "Ogg Vorbis," which is a free, open-source container format that is commonly used for digital multimedia, particularly for audio files. It was developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation and is designed to efficiently stream and manipulate high-quality audio. The Ogg format supports various codecs, with Vorbis being the most notable for audio compression.
Free Lossless Audio Codec. By 'lossless' it means that when you rip a CD to .flac, no data is lost during the ripping process (unlike mp3, ogg vorbis, wma, etc)
Some examples of MP3 Tag Editors are: ID3, Vorbis, or APE. These are types of software that support editing multimedia formats instead of the file content.
Use a program such as Audacity to create a WAV, OGG Vorbis or AIFF file. If you add on an open source MP3 codec, you can also create MP3 files.
Codecs depend entirely on what type if file you are trying to play. An MP3 codec is no good, for instance, for playing WMA files, and an XVid codec is useless for playing Ogg Vorbis files.
There may be a problem with your sound card. Spotify uses the Ogg Vorbis q5 codec which streams at approximately 160kb/s check your sound card handles this.
You probably have not installed the proper codecs. Many distributions do not bundle proprietary / patent-encumbered codecs by default. Files using free codecs like Ogg Vorbis, however, should be usable out of the box.
You suck it deeply and you buy legally what you're trying to install.
Ogg is a free, open standard container format maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. The creators of the Ogg format claim[dubious - discuss] that it is unrestricted by software patents and is designed to provide for efficient streaming and manipulation of high quality digital multimedia.The name 'Ogg' refers to the file format which can multiplex a number of separate independent free and open source codecs for audio, video, text (such as subtitles), and metadata.In the Ogg multimedia framework, Theora provides a lossy video layer, while the music-oriented Vorbis codec most commonly acts as the audio layer. The human speech compression codec Speex, lossless audio compression codec FLAC, and OggPCM may also act as audio layers.The term 'Ogg' is commonly used to refer to audio file format Ogg Vorbis, that is, Vorbis-encoded audio in the Ogg container. Previously, the .ogg file extension was used for any content distributed within Ogg, but as of 2007, the Xiph.Org Foundation requests that .ogg be used only for Vorbis due to backward compatibility concerns. The Xiph.Org Foundation decided to create a new set of file extensions and media types to describe different types of content such as .oga for audio only files, .ogv for video with or without sound (including Theora), and .ogx for applications.[3]The current version of the Xiph.Org Foundation's reference implementation, released on June 23, 2009, is libogg 1.1.4.[1] Another version, libogg2, has been in development, but is awaiting a rewrite as of 2008.[4] Both software libraries are free software, released under the new BSD license. Ogg reference implementation was separated from Vorbis on September 2, 2000.[5]Because the format is free, and its reference implementation is non-copylefted, Ogg's various codecs have been incorporated into a number of different free and proprietary media players, both commercial and non-commercial, as well as portable media players and GPS receivers from different manufacturers.