MP3 Stocks List

MP3 Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 19 GME Robinhood (NYSE:HOOD): Picks-and-Shovels Play on Meme Stock Resurgence
May 18 GME Flash in the Pan Meme Moment Takes Some Stock Traders on Wild Ride
May 18 GME Why GameStop won't go bankrupt like Bed Bath & Beyond
May 18 GME Benzinga Bulls And Bears: Tesla, GameStop, Tilray And Crypto Trader Says Shiba Inu Could 4X
May 18 GME Riding the Roaring Kitty roller coaster: Why GameStop and AMC meme madness is an ‘outlier event’
May 18 GME Market Froth Is Getting Extreme. Just Look at Meme Stocks.
May 17 GME Dow 40,000, GameStop meme craze and inflation hangover
May 17 GME Walmart CFO, Fmr Home Depot CEO, & more: C-Suite Insights
May 17 GME GameStop's insane week ends with ~27% stock gain: A timeline of notable events
May 17 GME Goldman Sees Fear of Underperforming as Retail Crowd Returns
May 17 MU Nvidia's long-term growth is uncertain: Analyst
May 17 GME Stocks Mixed As Dow Closes Above 40,0000; GameStop Dives As Nvidia Faces Earnings Test
May 17 GME Meme stock frenzy begins to fizzle
May 17 GME Do meme stocks like GameStop ruin the investing experience for newbies?
May 17 GME Meme stocks return: Yahoo Finance Reports
May 17 GME Hedge funds squeezed from short bets amid surging meme stocks, Goldman Sachs says
May 17 GME Decoding The FFIE Surge: Inside Faraday Future's Nasdaq Rally
May 17 GME Market drivers, GameStop, China's property push: Catalysts
May 17 GME Elon Musk to expand Tesla gigafactory rocked by Left-wing protests
May 17 GME These stocks ripped even higher than GameStop in the meme rally
MP3

MP3 (formally MPEG-1 Audio Layer III or MPEG-2 Audio Layer III) is a coding format for digital audio. Originally defined as the third audio format of the MPEG-1 standard, it was retained and further extended—defining additional bit-rates and support for more audio channels—as the third audio format of the subsequent MPEG-2 standard. A third version, known as MPEG 2.5—extended to better support lower bit rates—is commonly implemented, but is not a recognized standard.
MP3 (or mp3) as a file format commonly designates files containing an elementary stream of MPEG-1 audio and video encoded data, without other complexities of the MP3 standard.
In the aspects of MP3 pertaining to audio compression—the aspect of the standard most apparent to end-users (and for which is it best known)—MP3 uses lossy data-compression to encode data using inexact approximations and the partial discarding of data. This allows a large reduction in file sizes when compared to uncompressed audio. The combination of small size and acceptable fidelity led to a boom in the distribution of music over the Internet in the mid- to late-1990s, with MP3 serving as an enabling technology at a time when bandwidth and storage were still at a premium. The MP3 format soon became associated with controversies surrounding copyright infringement, music piracy, and the file ripping/ sharing services MP3.com and Napster, among others. With the advent of portable media players, a product category also including smartphones, MP3 support remains near-universal.
MP3 compression works by reducing (or approximating) the accuracy of certain components of sound that are considered to be beyond the hearing capabilities of most humans. This method is commonly referred to as perceptual coding or as psychoacoustic modeling. The remaining audio information is then recorded in a space-efficient manner. Compared to CD-quality digital audio, MP3 compression can commonly achieve a 75 to 95% reduction in size. For example, an MP3 encoded at a constant bitrate of 128 kbit/s would result in a file approximately 9% of the size of the original CD audio.Also designed as a streamable format, segments of a transmission can be lost without affecting the ability to decode later segments.
The Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) designed MP3 as part of its MPEG-1, and later MPEG-2, standards. The first subgroup for audio was formed by several teams of engineers at CCETT, Matsushita, Philips, Sony, AT&T-Bell Labs, Thomson-Brandt, and others. MPEG-1 Audio (MPEG-1 Part 3), which included MPEG-1 Audio Layer I, II and III, was approved as a committee draft for an ISO/IEC standard in 1991, finalised in 1992, and published in 1993 as ISO/IEC 11172-3:1993. A backwards-compatible MPEG-2 Audio (MPEG-2 Part 3) extension with lower sample- and bit-rates was published in 1995 as ISO/IEC 13818-3:1995.

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