PDA

View Full Version : Ever thought of getting .j2b music? I'm sure you have..


BadaboomAri
Mar 25, 2013, 02:16 AM
Anyone knows how to convert ANY wav,mp3,mp2,mp1,aiff,s3m,mod,it,xm,mtm
etc. etc all to .J2B?
It'll be really helpful indeed.
:lol:

cooba
Mar 25, 2013, 03:28 AM
wav,mp3,mp2,mp1,aiffImpossible, but <a href="http://www.jazz2online.com/jj2plus/">JJ2+</a> allows you to use them in your levels just fine.s3m,mod,it,xm,mtm<a href="http://www.jazz2online.com/downloads/7145/mod2j2b/">mod2j2b</a>

Seren
Mar 25, 2013, 05:27 AM
By the way, don't convert files to j2b.

DoubleGJ
Mar 25, 2013, 07:17 AM
J2b is extremely obsolete by now. Its only advantage is that it's well compressed so it usually takes less space, but with the current hardware standards, saving ~100KB on a file is pretty much pointless.

ThunderPX
Mar 25, 2013, 09:51 AM
how do i convert flac to snd

Treylina
Mar 25, 2013, 10:18 AM
Though, you probably shouldn't convert to j2b, for these reasons:
1. It can give off crackling sounds. I'm not a huge audiophile but I happen to notice this, and when it's really noticeable it's annoying.
2. In worst cases, crashing JJ2 instantly when you try it after converting (had this happen once lol).
3. I think mo3 is a better way of compressing modules, less noticeable compression (when minimal ofc) and still makes modules smaller, though I've never converted it like that before so I don't exactly know how to.
5. About boss tracks, angelscript makes this obselete with music changing commands.
6. Most modules are usually small enough to download efficiently for modern computers. I only recommend to try to convert it if it's a large module for a multiplayer level.

minmay
Mar 25, 2013, 12:30 PM
In my experience the filesize difference between lossless MO3, IT2.14, and J2B compression is insignificant. IT2.14 is supported by the most players, MO3 is the easiest to accurately convert to (and almost always the smallest but not by much), and J2B is the only one supported by unmodified JJ2. If I recall correctly J2B compression is lossless, whatever Treylina heard was probably something that screwed up while converting it, rather than lossy sample compression.

Impossible
ahem. mentos.s3m

Jgke
Mar 25, 2013, 12:48 PM
It's possible to convert mp3's etc into modules, it just really doesn't have any other advantages except being possible to listen on unmodified JJ2.

DoubleGJ
Mar 25, 2013, 11:10 PM
ahem. mentos.s3m
how many khz does that thing have though

it's like listening to the mentos ad on a microwave

minmay
Mar 25, 2013, 11:25 PM
Sadly I seem to have lost mentos.s3m for the second time, but I'm guessing it was 8363hz.

Stijn
Mar 25, 2013, 11:56 PM
Is that like this (http://mods.jazz2online.com/10150/slamjam.it/info/)

Treylina
Mar 26, 2013, 08:44 AM
If I recall correctly J2B compression is lossless, whatever Treylina heard was probably something that screwed up while converting it, rather than lossy sample compression.

Then the converter sucks. I actually hear slight crackle noises in some of the original j2bs, though not as noticably. Maybe because of the high sound frequency some people can't hear it, idk.

minmay
Mar 26, 2013, 12:23 PM
That's probably just because the original j2bs have terrible samples.

Is that like this (http://mods.jazz2online.com/10150
/slamjam.it/info/)
Nope, that's 22050hz. Keep in mind it's 8-bit.

Edit: Here it is at 8363 (http://www.cowmuffins.net/stuff/slam8khz.it).

KRSplatinum
Jan 9, 2014, 07:15 AM
You could just change the file extension from whatever it is now to .j2b ...
If you aren't planning on using the .j2b files for anything.
Even an .exe file would work if you wanted to do that.

Oh well, if you want to convert, say, an .mp3 to a .j2b here's my instructions.
- Get OpenMPT, this is a free module tracker program that works for Windows.
- Convert your .mp3 to .wav, this is the format we will use on OpenMPT to eventually plug into your .j2b file.
- Implement the .wav file into an OpenMPT project as a sample or an instrument.
- In the sequence editor, place the .wav sample as a note on the first line of the first pattern.
- Create enough blank patterns so that the music module is long enough to play the full .wav file as a sample.
- Once you tested it by playing to see if the mod works, save your project as a .mod or one of the formats cooba mentioned above that can be used with mod2j2b.
- Use mod2j2b.
- Voila, I think you would then have a .j2b which can be opened with OpenMPT or vanilla JJ2.

Hm...

Actually how about considering the new OpenMPT can actually edit .j2b files, instead of saving your project as a .mod file, just save it directly as a .j2b file and you won't need .mod2j2b.