Originally posted by Bryn
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Buying CDs. Why?
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Roehre
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostOr play completely other music as is on the label (a pop concert on an Ondine Finnish trumpet concertos CD, or a -still unidentified- piano recital in stead of Milhaud orchestral works on a Discovery CD, e.g.), or the label on the wrong side (a Philips CD), or only one track for the whole CD without index points (Marco Polo with Schmidt 1)
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Don Petter
Originally posted by Phileas View Post11. The last couple of seconds missing from a track. (This occasionally happens on Spotify also)
The issue is not that there are errors but how frequently they occur.
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Gary Cole
Originally posted by Bryn View PostIn the earlier days of CDs, works such as the Diabelli Variations might have index points, rather than separate tracks. I was sorry to see the use of indices abandoned by nearly all those authoring CDs.
Gary Cole
Regent Records Ltd
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Originally posted by Gary Cole View PostIt wasn't really to do with 'those authoring CDs' but hardware companies producing fewer and fewer consumer-level players that could read index points until it became pointless using them. I was a great fan of index points!
Gary Cole
Regent Records Ltd
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostWhat complicated lives downloaders seem to lead! It's a lot simpler just popping the disc into the machine, so what arcane online behaviour am I missing out on ?
Bryn, what's a[sic] CD architect?
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostBryn, what's a CD architect?MAGIX Software - your ideal apps for producing, designing, archiving and presenting your videos, music, photos, graphics or websites.
No. I'm none the wiser either.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by hafod View Post
EAC can assemble and burn CDs, compress and uncompress files, edit wave files etc, etc.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostWhat complicated lives downloaders seem to lead! It's a lot simpler just popping the disc into the machine, so what arcane online behaviour am I missing out on ?Steve
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Originally posted by Don Petter View PostDors it do anything (that you really need) that Exact Audio Copy can't do, for free?
EAC can assemble and burn CDs, compress and uncompress files, edit wave files etc, etc.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by johnb View PostI have used CD Architect, though not very often, and it seems to be a much more complex product, but not perhaps ideal for the casual user.
However, as with all software, you tend to get to know the bits you need and ignore the rest (which is what I do with EAC).
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Originally posted by Don Petter View PostThat was my impression from looking at that link.
However, as with all software, you tend to get to know the bits you need and ignore the rest (which is what I do with EAC).
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Don Petter
Originally posted by Bryn View PostEAC is a useful, if rather clunky. program. Trouble is, the unwary can end up with loads of programs they did not intend to download if they hit the big green buttons on the EAC site. Also, once installed, if you click on the Help button and then the "About EAC..." button. It will tell you that version 1.0 beta 3 is installed, and when you exit "About EAC.." it will tell you that you have an old beta and encourage you to get the latest version from their site. It's a con. Version 1.0 beta 3 is the latest version. It has not been revised since 2011. What they want to get you to do is click on the Download buttons on their site, which rather than offering you an update to version 1.0 beta 3, land you with converters you were not looking for. Beware. EAC itself is very useful, but its WAV editing option is a bit of a joke. It is not to be confused with the sort of editing offered by free programs such as Audacity, or dirt cheap commercial packages such as Sony's Movie Studio HD: Platinum Suite 12 (PC), which includes their Sound Forge Studio 10, (around £27 including p&p via the amazon.co.uk marketplace).
Well, my EAC is still 1.0 beta 2, and I never go near their site, so that doesn't worry me.
The WAV editing does all I want - Usually editing out parts of a file, including announcements and blip noises, tapering off the applause at the end or, occasionally, normalising the file.
Audacity, I'm sure, is better, but if the devil you know does what you want ...
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Originally posted by Don Petter View PostAudacity, I'm sure, is better, but if the devil you know does what you want ...
BUT
'clunky' and slow if you do lots of editing
it really is worth spending money if you spend a lot of time editing audio
my choice these days is Audition (ex cooledit) fast and accurate and batch processing etc
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