Hello MDS, and thanks for responding to my initial question.
You mentioned that WMP will do just as good of an extraction as EAC. That is new information to me. Is it the WMA Lossless selection on WMP that you are referring too that is as good as EAC's ripping ability? What bit rate would you suggest without it being overkill in your opinion?
After ripping to WMA Lossless, (if this is the selection on WMP that is competive with EAC and is the one that you are referring too) how can I then use LAME to put it into MP3?
Is WMA ......? as good of a archival choice as FLAC?
If you could answer each one of my above questions I would really appreciate it.
Thanks MDS
Praxis
When the program makes the WMA lossless file it has already gone through the ripping and encoding process. Look at it this way, when ripping a cd to a digital format it goes through the following steps:
1. Ripping - Extracts the information on the disc to a fully uncompressed file (usually wav) to a temporary directory.
2. Encoding - After it has ripped the disc to an uncompressed file it then sends the file to the encoder which then takes care of changing the file into the final format (mp3, FLAC, wma, wma lossless, aac, apple lossless, OGG, etc.).
Now EAC by itself is a ripper that only does step 1. But you can install encoders in the program which then allow it to do step 2 as well. EAC is better than WMP when it comes to step 1, that is ripping the music off the cd. As far as what type of encoding is better there is really no difference when doing lossless formats (wma lossless, apple lossless, FLAC, OGG) since they all can be converted back to the original file (wav) with no loss of information.