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I thought all of the CDs were 16 bit/44.1 kHz?
Thanks, Steve, the 24/96 tracks sound positively "LIVE." Unfortunately, they are making my 16/44.1 Flac files sound tame by comparison, so I need to buy more.If I buy their DVD version, will EAC rip it into Flac off the DVD to play on Foobar?
Quote from: Jon L on 26 Jan 2007, 06:24 amThanks, Steve, the 24/96 tracks sound positively "LIVE." Unfortunately, they are making my 16/44.1 Flac files sound tame by comparison, so I need to buy more.If I buy their DVD version, will EAC rip it into Flac off the DVD to play on Foobar?I have not tried this myself. There are tools that can extract from DVD tracks. Try:http://audio-dvd-creator.com/guide.htmhttp://www.afterdawn.com/software/video_software/dvd_rippers/http://24bit.turtleside.com/Steve N.
Just getting into this area, so I'm a novice. But this software was highly recommended over EAC. All the formats are listed, plus its capabilities. See if it can rip DVD, and please post your opinion.http://www.poikosoft.com/
I think the Poikosoft was recommended (by an industry professional) because it *is* easier to use than EAC. I haven't tried it as yet, so I cannot comment directly. "Free is a great advantage", true....but $29.95 is small pittance to pay for a more user-friendly program, and it includes lifetime updates. I'm interested in using this type of software in as straight a line as possible....I don't wish to "tweak around" my computer to try and solve problems or imperfections. Time is money, 'ya know.
I wish everything were that inexpensive.
Double....the fellow that recommended Poikosoft uses a Macbook for all his ripping. Why can't you use it with OS/X?
Supported operating systems: Windows 2000, Windows XP (x86 and x64), Windows 2003, and Windows Vista (x86 and x64)