I use stereo.Originally posted by Benno@3 March 2003 - 15:14
I 've got a question to all people using dbpoweramp.
What should I choose as channels under compression settings?
Joint stereo, stereo, dual channel??
I use stereo.Originally posted by Benno@3 March 2003 - 15:14
I 've got a question to all people using dbpoweramp.
What should I choose as channels under compression settings?
Joint stereo, stereo, dual channel??
Do you know what the difference is?
I always used joint stereo as yet. Is it smaller, worse quality..?
You Better Keep In Mind That I Can Read Between The Lines
Never argue with an idiot, they drag you down to there level and beat you with experience!!
Haveing problems ripping some CDs right now.....will try to make this short and get back to ya.Originally posted by Benno@3 March 2003 - 15:19
Do you know what the difference is?
I always used joint stereo as yet. Is it smaller, worse quality..?
Stereo VS Joint Stereo
Ok thanks.
If I got it right joint stereo is smaller than stereo because it uses some kind of additional compression?
You Better Keep In Mind That I Can Read Between The Lines
Never argue with an idiot, they drag you down to there level and beat you with experience!!
No, as far as I know it would make no difference, however TechTV did test some of those disc fixers and they found some that actually worked. I mean they scratched some discs pretty bad and were able to use one of those disc fixers to make them readable. I would say check out Techtv.com and look for the "The Screensavers link, search for disc fixers, it may just be worthwhile for you in the long run. But I do have to say you need to try CDEX, TechTV found it to be the best ripper for music out there in their trials, so that is what I use, I did not use anything else ever so I am not the guy to ask what may be different, but it works beautifully for me.Originally posted by FuNkY CaPrIcOrN@3 March 2003 - 15:12
Is CDex good at ripping CDs that are in bad shape(scratches and what not),sometimes have hard time with old CDs ripping that are scratched?From what I have always understood no Ripper/Encoder can help that.
That's all I needed to know.Originally posted by FuNkY CaPrIcOrN@3 March 2003 - 20:12
It only uses LAME 3.92 as far as I know.But I don't mind.
I like a program that gives you choices, so CDex is still the best one for me!
That's all I needed to know.Originally posted by DataMore+3 March 2003 - 15:53--></span><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (DataMore @ 3 March 2003 - 15:53)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin--FuNkY CaPrIcOrN@3 March 2003 - 20:12
It only uses LAME 3.92 as far as I know.But I don't mind.
I like a program that gives you choices, so CDex is still the best one for me! [/b][/quote]
I don't mind LAME.....can you use LAME with CDex?
How fast it it too.....might try it out?
my vote goes to CDEX aswell. it's an excellent ripper, i can really recomend it.
Yeah you can and if a new version of Lame comes out, you can just download the Lame .dll file and replace the old one in CDex's main folder.Originally posted by FuNkY CaPrIcOrN@3 March 2003 - 20:55
I don't mind LAME.....can you use LAME with CDex?
The same goes to a bunch of other encoders.
CD DEX
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