"malcolm" wrote in message
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
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"malcolm" wrote in message
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
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"The Artist" wrote in message
"Robert Morein" emitted :
However, this is not original material. The object is not to
build a bridge out of matchsticks, but, with an economy of
effort, to use a computer as an audio jukebox. A commercial
package would capture the CD in one step, and frankly, I don't
care what the internal representation is. It just so happens
that CD burner programs universally have an option to save a
disk image.
I don't see what the big deal is. Just rip the CD's to your hard
drive with a suitable program. Couple of clicks per CD. You want
covers? Scan 'em. What's the problem?
What's missing is the power and flexibility of CD cue sheets.
What program do you suggest?
Take your pick, there are dozens of alternatives. I sometimes use
a thing called WinDAC for ripping. Canon 3200F for scanning. Both
are quick, simple and easy to use.
Which of them automatically build cue lists from the CDs they rip?
Audiograbber
Please help me here, where on
http://www.audiograbber.com-us.net/faq.html can I find the cue sheet
feature described?
Tracknames and times are saved in plain textfiles with the extension
.Nam for tracknames and .Tim for times. The filename for auto loaded
tracknames is "Auto.Nam" and for auto loaded times "Auto.Tim".
Now I'm really ****ed. This is probably about 100 lines of code away from
being a facility for putting a cue sheet of tracks into the .wav file.