
pzaur
Audioholic Samurai
Just to clarify. That was sarcasm...
-pat
-pat
CD-EX will look up the file names-I use it. You have to go under option and under cddb, put in your email address and tell it either to auto look up or there is a button to manually look up the info. It has most every cd out there.i'm curious if you guys re-type the filenames on each file you rip each time or are your cd extractors capable of using some sort of online database to name the files the actual title and singer.
the last software I used "cd-ex" doesn't have that feature and i'm too lazy to rip all my cd's and retype all the song titles.
edit: (im looking at my cdex now and I'm seeing cddb options, hmm, how come my last two cd rips came out with 1,2,3, etc. filenames)
It's all right. I'm still a little sick so some things may not be as obvious to me as normalJust to clarify. That was sarcasm...
-pat
I would personally be *astounded* if anyone could reliably pick out the 320kbps MP3. I lose the ability to discern after 192 kbps, and even at 192 I have a hard time differentiating unless it's a track I know very well.Is ripping a CD to a 320Kbs mp3 format close enough to CD audio quality? How does it compare to the variable bit rate rips in mp3?
I rip everything WMA lossless. I have plenty of HD space, I just put the CD in and let WMP 11 do it's job. No fuss, no muss. Just ripped.
A 500GB Drive is ~$100 and will store about 700-1000 CD's lossless. Of course the length of the CD has a lot to do with how much space it takes up. I am averaging around 500MB per CD.
YMMV of course.