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@@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ Advanced Audio Coding, often abbreviated as "AAC", was introduced as part of the
has been adopted by the MPEG-4 standard later (1999). AAC is often considered to be the "successor" of MP3.
Compared to MP3, AAC adds support for multi-channel audio, it support more sampling rates as well as more
flexible bitrates. Two variants of AAC are commonly used: Low-Complexity (LC) and High-Efficiency (HE). While
-LC-AAC is intended for medium to high bitrates, LC-AAC works best at low bitrates. At low bitrates, HE-AAC
+LC-AAC is intended for medium to high bitrates, HE-AAC works best at low bitrates. At low bitrates, HE-AAC
clearly outperforms MP3 - at higher bitrates the differences aren't that clear. AAC streams are usually, but
not necessarily, encapsulated in an MP4 (MPEG-4 Part 14) container. That's why AAC audio files almost always
have an ".mp4" file extension. Still the audio format is AAC - MP4 is only the container! Be aware that some