640 Kbps Songs Download Online
| Service | Max Quality | Bitrate Equivalent | |--------|-------------|---------------------| | (HiFi Plus) | FLAC / MQA | up to ~9216 kbps (24-bit/192kHz) | | Qobuz | FLAC 24-bit | up to ~4608 kbps | | Apple Music | ALAC (lossless) | up to ~1411 kbps (CD quality) | | Amazon Music Unlimited | FLAC (HD/Ultra HD) | up to ~9216 kbps | | Deezer (HiFi tier) | FLAC 16-bit/44.1kHz | ~1411 kbps |
The s that looks like an f is called a “long s.” There’s no logical explanation for it, but it was a quirk of manuscript and print for centuries. There long s isn’t crossed, so it is slightly different from an f (technically). But obviously it doesn’t look like a capital S either. One of the conventions was to use a small s at the end of a word, as you note. Eventually people just stopped doing it in the nineteenth century, probably realizing that it looks stupid.