AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) refers to digital audio coding standard that represent audio files based on lossy audio compression. Learn more about this file format here.
A file with a .ac3 extension is an Audio Codec 3 file, introduced by Dolby Laboratories. It is an audio format that can contain up to six channels of audio output. Learn more about this file format here.
The AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) is an uncompressed audio file format developed by Apple in 1998, but is based on EA IFF 85 Learn more about this file format here.
The M4A file format is an audio file created by using the AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) which is known as a lossy compression. Learn more about this file format here.
Files with .mp3 extension are digitally encoded file formats for audio files that are formally based on the MPEG-1 Audio Layer III or MPEG-2 Audio Layer III. Learn more about this file format here.
OGG is an Ogg Vorbis Compressed Audio File that is saved with the .ogg extension. OGG files are used for storing audio data and can include artist and track information and metadata as well. Learn more about this file format here.
WAV, known for WAVE (Waveform Audio File Format), is a subset of Microsoft’s Resource Interchange File Format (RIFF) specification for storing digital audio files. Learn more about this file format here.