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In Reply to: RE: CD ripping to flac add "jitter" posted by Paul Wilson on June 02, 2016 at 03:58:48
Whoever wrote that has absolutely no clue how computer works.
Any today's software can and will copy exactly, bit to bit, data on a CD, provided that there is no damage to a CD.
Whoever thinks otherwise is a fool.
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"One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite insane."
Follow Ups:
What immediately caught my eye was the ECC discussion. Totally bogus nonsense! I don't think the guy has any concept of bit weighting, i.e. MSB, LSB, and endian.
Abe-
in your opinion, which is the easiest way to copy a Hi-Rez wav or flac file to a CD-r ?
sidebar: there is a hi-rez download that I want to own, but it is not offered, on a physical CD for purchase.
Depends on your computer and what software you have. I haven't done it in ages so my info may be old.
I believe iTunes will do it. You create a playlist with the tracks you want, choose a few other options, then burn to CD-R. There's a link below but I have not done it myself.
There's also a very popular piece of software called "Toast" by Roxio that burns just about any format to CD-R.
Roxio also makes CD/DVD burning software for Windows. I'm not sure if Windows 10 can still use Windows Media Player for this task.
TY -Abe.
I use a PC w/ windows 7. Any further advice guys?
Try Windows Media Player.
Will do- Abe.
I'm not sure if it will work as I have not tried it but it appears that it should. good luck!
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