First of all, bear with me as I get all of this out.
Currently, I have many CD's (maybe 600 or so) that I have already ripped into my computer via Windows Media Player using the WMA 128bit format because of the so-called (at the time) superiority of WMA over MP3 in terms of audio sound quality using the same bit rate. Also at that time, disc space was more expensive as compared to today, meaning that I am not necessarily as concerned now with space taken up as I was when I first ripped them all, at least to a point. Truth be told, I can't really hear a difference in quality and I am a hobbyist musician! At any rate, I have a need to have my music in MP3 format at times because my guitar trainer only accepts MP3 format, but I know I'll lose audio quality if I convert to MP3 from WMA. Not suitable. Also, I have a car MP3/WMA player that gives me horrible glitch sounds on many of the CD's I have ripped into WMA on version 10 of WMP. This only happens on THIS player, not my portable player or on the computer itself. Microsoft has sort of acknowledge the issue here but this won't really help me as there is not a real fix short of re-ripping and if I am going to do that, then...
So I got to thinking that likely the BEST option I could pursue is re-ripping my entire collection in a lossless format, hopefully one-and-for-all so I could then convert freely as needed to whatever audio format I want to. Makes sense to me.
So the question becomes, which lossless format offers the best combinations of options? As I said, disk space isn't really too much of an issue, but at 60o or so CDs, I would like to have the best compression I can get and still be lossless. Also, I don't want to rip all of these again, ever, so I want to use a CODEC that it "in it for the long haul" so to speak. So what would you audio experts do, given this situation?
I am asking this now because I am about to purchase dbPowerAmp and I want to be sure it will be the answer to my audio world. If it matters, my machine is a dual core AMD Athlon with 4GB of memory running on Windows XP Home. My DVD-CD burner drive is a Sony DRU-800 series plus I have another no-name DVD reader.
Currently, I have many CD's (maybe 600 or so) that I have already ripped into my computer via Windows Media Player using the WMA 128bit format because of the so-called (at the time) superiority of WMA over MP3 in terms of audio sound quality using the same bit rate. Also at that time, disc space was more expensive as compared to today, meaning that I am not necessarily as concerned now with space taken up as I was when I first ripped them all, at least to a point. Truth be told, I can't really hear a difference in quality and I am a hobbyist musician! At any rate, I have a need to have my music in MP3 format at times because my guitar trainer only accepts MP3 format, but I know I'll lose audio quality if I convert to MP3 from WMA. Not suitable. Also, I have a car MP3/WMA player that gives me horrible glitch sounds on many of the CD's I have ripped into WMA on version 10 of WMP. This only happens on THIS player, not my portable player or on the computer itself. Microsoft has sort of acknowledge the issue here but this won't really help me as there is not a real fix short of re-ripping and if I am going to do that, then...
So I got to thinking that likely the BEST option I could pursue is re-ripping my entire collection in a lossless format, hopefully one-and-for-all so I could then convert freely as needed to whatever audio format I want to. Makes sense to me.
So the question becomes, which lossless format offers the best combinations of options? As I said, disk space isn't really too much of an issue, but at 60o or so CDs, I would like to have the best compression I can get and still be lossless. Also, I don't want to rip all of these again, ever, so I want to use a CODEC that it "in it for the long haul" so to speak. So what would you audio experts do, given this situation?
I am asking this now because I am about to purchase dbPowerAmp and I want to be sure it will be the answer to my audio world. If it matters, my machine is a dual core AMD Athlon with 4GB of memory running on Windows XP Home. My DVD-CD burner drive is a Sony DRU-800 series plus I have another no-name DVD reader.
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