You can add sound to a web page. There
are several different types of sound files and formats, including
.wav, .midi, and .mp3. Some factors to consider before deciding
on a format and method for adding sound are its purpose, your audience,
file size, sound quality, and differences in browsers.
Note: Sound files are handled very differently and inconsistently
by different browsers. You may want to add a sound file to a Flash
SWF file and then embed the SWF file to improve consistency.
The following list describes the more common audio file formats
along with some of the advantages and disadvantages of each for
web design.
- .midi or .mid (Musical Instrument Digital Interface)
-
This format is for instrumental music. MIDI files are supported
by many browsers and don’t require a plug‑in. Although their sound
quality is very good, it can vary depending on a visitor’s sound
card. A small MIDI file can provide a long sound clip. MIDI files cannot
be recorded and must be synthesized on a computer with special hardware
and software.
- .wav (Waveform Extension)
-
These files have good sound quality, are supported by many
browsers, and don’t require a plug‑in. You can record your own WAV
files from a CD, tape, microphone, and so on. However, the large
file size severely limits the length of sound clips that you can
use on your web pages.
- .aif (Audio Interchange File Format, or AIFF)
-
The AIFF format, like WAV format, has good sound quality,
can be played by most browsers, and doesn’t require a plug‑in; you
can also record AIFF files from a CD, tape, microphone, and so on.
However, the large file size severely limits the length of sound
clips that you can use on your web pages.
- .mp3 (Motion Picture Experts Group Audio, or MPEG-Audio
Layer‑3)
-
A compressed format that makes sound files substantially
smaller. The sound quality is very good: if an mp3 file is recorded
and compressed properly, its quality can rival that of a CD. mp3
technology lets you “stream” the file so that a visitor doesn’t
have to wait for the entire file to download before hearing it. However,
the file size is larger than a Real Audio file, so an entire song
could still take quite a while to download over a typical dial‑up
(telephone line) modem connection. To play mp3 files, visitors must
download and install a helper application or plug‑in, such as QuickTime,
Windows Media Player or RealPlayer.
- .ra, .ram, .rpm, or Real Audio
-
This format has a high degree of compression, with smaller
file sizes than mp3. Entire song files can be downloaded in a reasonable
amount of time. Because the files can be “streamed” from a normal web
server, visitors can begin listening to the sound before the file
has completely downloaded. Visitors must download and install the
RealPlayer helper application or plug‑in to play these files.
- .qt, .qtm, .mov or QuickTime
-
This format is both an audio and video format developed by
Apple Computer. QuickTime is included with Apple Macintosh operating
systems, and is used by most Macintosh applications that use audio, video,
or animation. PCs can also play files in QuickTime format, but require
a special QuickTime driver. QuickTime supports most encoding formats,
including Cinepak, JPEG, and MPEG.
Note: In addition to the more
common formats listed above, there are many different audio and
video file formats available for use on the web. If you encounter
a media file format that you are unfamiliar with, locate the creator
of the format for information on how best to use and deploy it.