You cannot meaningfully increase the bit rate after having reduced it. Information which has been discarded cannot simply be created from thin air.
A MP3 file is actually a compressed WAV file. The compression is: WAV file size / MP3 file size Bitrate is the amount of kBits a mp3 file uses in 1 second. So a 320kB/s file uses 320kBit in 1 second(or 40kBytes/s) The relation is that if the bitrate gets bigger, the compression get's lower.
You need to download a Bitrate converter.
You need to re-encode your video with the changed bitrate.
No you can't. MP3 is a lossy format, so you can't get back the data that's been thrown away.
Bluetooth 2.0 Nominal bitrate is 3.0Mbps but the practical bitrate is 2.1Mbps
FASM "Quality Enhancer Bitrate Squeezer" is an application for compressing h264 video streams, optimised for low bitrate.
Noteburner MP3 Bitrate Converter is a commercial program that can change the bitrate while maintaining the ID3 tags which contain the artist and other information.
the 1st one
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It shouldn't. However, it mainly depends on where you get your songs from. Songs at 128 bitrate could sound great (most likely when legally downloaded) in comparison to songs at 192 (most likely when illegally downloaded) possibly because they were converted from a lower bitrate.
Right click and properties
so if there is no bitrate then the file is infected ?