yep thats exactly right its like ripping a iso image of teh cd and tehn burnign it it wont be any different
yep thats exactly right its like ripping a iso image of teh cd and tehn burnign it it wont be any different
well the track that I burned. Which I thought sounded "fuzzy"
is from the Underworld Soundtrack, and it seems it might just be the song
(distortion)
Anyone that has the track 18 - Various - The Icarus Line - On The Lash
give it a listen and let me know if it sounds somewhat distorted or the fuzzyness is just an effect the artist used.
If so then I suppose I did not loose any sound quality
If not then this crappy file will still not get shared
i just use nero.. works fine
ice ice baby
I use matches works a lot better
i use FreeRip for ripping and Nero for burning
How well does Nero Rip?
I would like to say that I am the topic starter, first of all, and secondly I do appreciate all the input, although I need to state my question once again.
It wasnt only answered incorrectly.... but requestioned incorrectly and again answered incorrectly.
Anyways, let me put this simply:
I am not referring to an MP3 I am talking striclty wav
The question is thus:
If I take a storebought prerecorded music cd and burn a cdr directly from that cd to the cdr.....
then.... I take that same store bought prerecorded music cd and rip it as a wav and then burn a cdr from that....
which finished product will be a replica or exact copy? The one that was ripped or the one that was burned from cd to cd? If there is a difference at all.
Thank you for your support
"Maybe this world is another planet's Hell." - Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
"Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake."
- Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
"Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes
and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000
vaccuum tubes and perhaps weigh 1.5 tons."
- Unknown
"The difference between pornography and erotica is lighting."
- Gloria Leonard
Software that allows you to copy "disk to disk" requires your pc to make a digital image of the file, a wav, which it stores in the buffer, then burns to the CDR.Originally posted by musicmaster@8 October 2003 - 01:08
The question is thus:
If I take a storebought prerecorded music cd and burn a cdr directly from that cd to the cdr.....
then.... I take that same store bought prerecorded music cd and rip it as a wav and then burn a cdr from that....
which finished product will be a replica or exact copy? The one that was ripped or the one that was burned from cd to cd? If there is a difference at all.
Converting to wav, then burning the wav to CDR will result in the exact same end result.
Proud member of MDS
I think you told me that before jibb... but i think you also mentioned something about copying from disc to disc not being as good or something to that effect. I did read it also somewhere. Any feed back on that?
Also, I am trying to get back on slsk. I dl the new client... but couldnt log in... so I copied all my config files and removed all the clients. Now I am going to try and load it all again. We shall see.
"Maybe this world is another planet's Hell." - Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
"Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake."
- Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
"Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes
and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000
vaccuum tubes and perhaps weigh 1.5 tons."
- Unknown
"The difference between pornography and erotica is lighting."
- Gloria Leonard
If you are ripping disk to disk, it shouldn't make a difference, providing your pc and burner are fast enough to do it smoothly on the fly. Most modern machines should be able to handle that without any trouble.Originally posted by musicmaster@8 October 2003 - 01:29
I think you told me that before jibb... but i think you also mentioned something about copying from disc to disc not being as good or something to that effect. I did read it also somewhere. Any feed back on that?
Good luck with SS, I'm taking a night off. Should have it back up in a few hours.
Proud member of MDS
^^ that was the answer, in the first reply.Originally posted by Me
a .wav file is lossless.
Meaning, it has lost no audio data at all, which is why it's such a large format. If you rip a CD as .wav's, then burn them onto
another disc as an audio CD, you have an exact replica.
Digital media can be reproduced infinitely, with no quality loss, as long as you have the space for the uncompressed files.
all the big green text was completely unnecessary.
now...go poke a badger with a spoon.
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