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I rip my LPs to a stand alone Philips CD recorder, manually indexing each track. I then download the CD-RW (music) to my laptop. I have a very special piece of software from Cakewalk, Pro Audio 9 (it is now called Sonar). This software allows me to dump each song, clip the music pane at the start, do a computerized fad at the end and then normalize the recording to bring the input to the highest level. Then I burn onto a regular CD-R for the finality. This is a long process, but there is no noise between songs and the fad-outs are sweet. I have made some copies that sound better than their commercial cousins and have fooled people listening to them, telling them they were listening to a record, of course, with disbelief. Cakewalk makes another cheaper product called Pyro but it doesn't have all the bells and whistles of it's costlier counterpart. I use it because I have it. It may not be the best choice in software, but I think my process of recording is the best way to go. Some people have bought turntables with built in USB, but reports are that the tables kind of suck.Wayner