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New site? Maybe some day.
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please, I've never ripped .flacs and I have to rip about 10,000 CDs to FLAC before the end of the summer. |
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what does it use for the ID tag look up? does it find most things? |
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Lossless is the way to go. Sadly, I'm not sure what a good program for Windows would be, but I have a really nice one on OS X... |
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the L in flac stands for lossless. |
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Yes sir. That I know. XLD is the main one I use on OS X. Maybe there is something similar on Windows? I'm too lazy to search on Google. It provides all sorts of custom options and came up with tags for 99% of the time. XLD matches your rip to a database to make sure it is bit perfect and makes logs of your rips so you know if there are any errors. |
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Rhythm Box is pretty good, and free. |
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idk what waffles is but EAC is still a beta. |
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I like that JET. what encoding level do you use? 1-8? |
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I usually use 5. The higher you go, the smaller the file size. I find that the difference between 5 and 8 is minimal in saving space and anything after 5 rapes your CPU.
I think it's pulled in most of the info from a database on CDs, but I admittedly don't rip CDs all that often. So when something doesn't bring in the info, it's not a big deal to me to manually put it in. So, I guess see if you keep liking it. |
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Waffles is an invite-only music torrent site. They're big on FLAC. |
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EAC is just like audio grabber. It basically is audio grabber. I used to use that years ago when FLACs were basically "why would anyone want to store that much data". JET is a bit more polished. It also looks like I could do I'm going to try to install JET on this computer and start ripping. a couple things I want
1) covers
2) flac/mp3 ripping at the same time
3) advanced tagging so they all say "metal room" or something like that.
I'm doing this to preserve my metal CDs and to test out this: http://www.rivendellaudio.org/ |
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I'm going to try 8 and see if my PC can handle it. This is a quadcore machine so... |
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OK, ripping FLACs set to 8 on my quadcore machine takes about 6% of my CPU and takes about 4 minutes per CD. I could easily hook up a couple drives and rip a bunch of CDs at once. |
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OK, ripping FLACs set to 8 on my quadcore machine takes about 6% of my CPU and takes about 4 minutes per CD. I could easily hook up a couple drives and rip a bunch of CDs at once. |
awesome |
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I have no idea what the fuck anyone is talking about in this thread. |
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I have no idea what the fuck anyone is talking about in this thread. |
lossless audio files.
they sound way more better than mp3s
guessing the radio station doesn't want to have the physical space dominated by CDs anymore and are going with a lossless database. smart cookies. |
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FLAC's are OGG, just the lossless format. |
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ok... now I'm only getting 1.8X |
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I would also love to get a wave signature of each FLAC too. that would rule. |
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I have no idea what the fuck anyone is talking about in this thread. |
lossless audio files.
they sound way more better than mp3s
guessing the radio station doesn't want to have the physical space dominated by CDs anymore and are going with a lossless database. smart cookies. |
Lossless only sound better than mp3s if you have a good ear and the right equipment. Generally, most people can't really hear the difference between a 256 kbps+ mp3 and lossless. But below 192 kbps there is a huge difference even on mediocre setups.
At the same time, it's always nice to have lossless just because it's lossless. You're losing zero data from the original source. |
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Well, I take that back. A lot of times you are still losing something from the original source. If it's analog, you're losing some info because digital waves are like connect the dots and the analog waves are constant. And a lot of digital recordings are initially done above standard CD quality. Again, it's hard for most people to tell the difference anyway... |
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Lossless only sound better than mp3s if you have a good ear and the right equipment. |
OR you are converting between different encoding formats. You can get aliased nodes if you aren't careful and don't use the right encoding or if encoding scheme's are different. I'm going from across a bunch of lines in a signal change. |
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oh and it was jitter correction that was slowing it down. |
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Lossless only sound better than mp3s if you have a good ear and the right equipment. |
OR you are converting between different encoding formats. You can get aliased nodes if you aren't careful and don't use the right encoding or if encoding scheme's are different. I'm going from across a bunch of lines in a signal change. |
Interesting. I do not doubt that.
I have never dealt with digital audio files for radio or anything other than listening in my room or on my mp3 player. |
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good thing is that it's mostly 44KHz 16-bit @ 96Kbps |
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so far, 2 CDs weren't found and 1 CD wouldn't read. the is also tons times that tracks fail and I have to start them over again. |
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I have a pile of CDs that didn't record. If I had 4 computers or maybe just 4 CD-ROMS, I would be like an octopus and rip amost as fast as I can change discs. My Desktop continuously failes with a -900 error and I have to re-rip the track and it's fine. annoying. My Laptop is a little slower, but has no errors. |
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I have 3 computers ripping right now and I basically only have a minute's rest before swapping them. I switched from a 52X IDE to 48X USB drive on my desktop and now Im getting 17x instead of 7x and none of those -900 errors. |
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I did a similar project years ago using EAC. Man that was fucking boring as shit. |
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388 albums, 2410 files, 66GB and I'm almost finished the A's.
I need to make up another quadcore to do this.
it takes about 2-3 minutes to flac each CD with my quadcore. |
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so... after getting through the A's... I realized that I'm missing 2 bits of information.
1) Record Label
2) date released.
http://easytag.sourceforge.net/
I'm going to add it into the A's and I'm adding it into the B's now as I add them to the collection. |
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man... I can't get easytag to work in windows. |
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Ya, lossless rips always bring the worst out of CD scratches. |
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dbpoweramp does up to 30 different checks including hashes from other people's rips. |
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still, itunes finds things correctly where dbpoweramp does not. |
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Trader's Little Helper - http://tlh.easytree.org/
- Encoding of wav files to ape, flac, shn and mp3 format
- Re-encoding of flac files
- Decoding of ape, flac, mkw, shn, mp2 and mp3 files to wav format
- Direct conversion of ape, flac, mkw and shn files to flac or mp3 format
- Test of audio files encoded in ape, flac, shn and mkw format
- Verification of cfp, ffp, md5, sfv and st5 checksum files
- Creation of cfp, ffp, md5, sfv and st5 checksum files
- Display of audio file properties (ape, flac, shn, mkw and wav files)
- Fixing of sector boundary errors that come with ape, flac, shn, mkw, wav and mp3 files
- Removal of extra RIFF chunks in audio files
- Rewriting of WAVE headers to canonical format
- Creation of skt files for non-seekable shn files
- Test of wav files for mp3 source
- Creation of torrent files
- Display of the information encoded in torrent files
- Hashing of torrent files against local filesets or files
- Drag & Drop functionality for all supported file types
- Integration into Windows Explorer
- Check for update function |
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I'll use that to convert the flac to mp3s afterwards if it will keep meta data. |
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ok, I started t his up again. I got 6 external CD-Roms now to do it with one computer. I'm using dBpoweramp starting all over from scratch. dBpoweramp rips each track like 16 times, hashing and comparing the results to each other and other tags that other people have gotten flacing the same file. it also scrapes 5+ different online places for tracks/covers. I'm liking it so far. With 6 drives in one computer, I can do as much as I did with 4 computers. |
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I was ripping a few hundred a day, but then my computer started rebooting randomly.
[IFVALUE]album artist,[album artist],[IFCOMP]Various Artists[][IF!COMP][artist][][]\[album]\[artist] - [album] - [track]. [title]
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I don't even use Jetaudio anymore now that I realized that Winamp monitors folders and has .flac plug-ins. |
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my jetaudio rips sucked cause they have errors.
yesterday, I had 2 computers set up. one of them kept ripping tracks and calling then un-accurate. the reason is:
http://www.dbpoweramp.com/cd-ripper-setup-guide.htm
I was clicking the button beside the options button and not the options button itself. so I was doing burst rips with out secure! arg! It still compares to the online accurip thing so the CDs "should be" fine. And if some track said that it wasn't accurate, I would re-rip the inaccurate tracks or rip it on my other machine. Still, that pissed me off. I wish my desktop would stop rebooting. I'm thinking of just buying the fastest computer I can and ditching my frankenstein machine. |
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that app looks awesome.
I started writing something exactly like that years ago, but never finished it. |
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A-J = about 1800 records (have to redo)
K-O is about 1200 records |
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just ripped upsidedown cross. |
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getting so close to being done with this. |
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ok, jet sucked if you didn't know. DBpoweramp all the way. One problem is that itunes doesn't support flac. So I wrote this little script to have both FLAC and MP3 files. This will look for FLAC files and then generate a .mp3
I'm going to use this on my .wma, etc... to that clutter up my .mp3 directories.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Cwd;
my $convertLocation = "C:/Program Files (x86)/Illustrate/dBpoweramp/CoreConverter.exe";
my $location = getcwd; #root directory
my $n = 0;
readsub($location);
print "Found $n file(s)!\n"; #print the total number of files you found
exit;
sub readsub {
my ($file_t) = @_;
if (-f $file_t) { #if its a file
$n++; #the total number of files
print $file_t."\n";
#if ends with .flac, look for .mp3. If no .mp3, create
#if ends with .wma, look for .mp3. If no .mp3, create
#if ends with .mpa, look for .mp3. If no .mp3, create
if($file_t =~ m/\.flac$/)
{
print "Converting:".$file_t,"\n";
my $outfilename = $file_t;
$outfilename =~ s/\.flac$/\.mp3/g;
if (-e $outfilename)
{
print "Already Exists:".$outfilename,"\n";
}
else
{
system ("\"$convertLocation\" -infile=\"$file_t\" -outfile=\"$outfilename\" -convert_to=\"mp3 (Lame)\" -V 2") or print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
}
}
else
{
print "Skipping:".$file_t,"\n";
}
}
if (-d $file_t) { #if its a directory
opendir(AA,$file_t) || return;
my @list = readdir(AA);
closedir (AA);
my $file_to_act;
foreach $file_to_act (sort @list) {
if ($file_to_act =~ /^\.|\.$/) { next; }
else { readsub("$file_t/$file_to_act"); }
}
}
}
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I need to figure out what that script stuff is. That exactly what I want to be able to do with my FLAC files. What are you playing you FLAC files on? Just your computer or is it hooked up to your home stereo? |
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I'm playing them on a radio station. |
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I started digitizing the entire general section of my radio station so that we are ready for our renovations. I've been digitizing non-stop since mid-decemeber and I've got 722GB so far.
Right now I'm on BIG. oof. |
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So many FLACs so far... SO MANY TB |
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over 6 years later... and I'm getting so close to the end. |
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still haven't found anything better than dbpoweramp |
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I can do about 35-75GB of FLACs a day, |
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getting so close to the first part of my project being done. Only 1 large box left... |
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