Re: EAC vs dBpoweramp 13.3
Like, compiling a library for a radio station? :smile2:
Let me check that I understand you: you would PREFER to include the 2 seconds of silence at the end of a CD track because it is more 'accurate?'
Ah! Remember that the Trim Silence DSP is run AFTER the track is ripped (and in my case, BEFORE encoding to MP3). So, it does NOT affect the accuracy of the rip as reported by dbPowerAmp in any way. Does that make sense?
So, once a completely accurate rip is finished, the Trim Silence DSP removes the redundant silence at the end (and in some cases, the start!) of every track. This is very important for a radio station, or for any other use where you might want to crossfade or segue tracks. A lot of radio playout automation software relies on tracks NOT containing silence at the end (the excellent mAirList is a notable expection to this). So, if your CD ripper application doesn't remove the silence for you, guess what? YOU (or your staff) waste many hours removing it manually, and (usually) less accurately than dbPowerAmp's Trim Silence DSP would have done the same job.
If you are using (for example) Winamp to play maybe a hundred tracks for a party in sequence and segue (crossfade) between each track in the list, the result WILL play those annoying it-sounds-like-a-CD two-second gaps; but if you use the Trim Silence DSP while ripping, the end result is much more pleasing and sounds much more like a DJ is playing the music! :D
Like, compiling a library for a radio station? :smile2:
Let me check that I understand you: you would PREFER to include the 2 seconds of silence at the end of a CD track because it is more 'accurate?'
Ah! Remember that the Trim Silence DSP is run AFTER the track is ripped (and in my case, BEFORE encoding to MP3). So, it does NOT affect the accuracy of the rip as reported by dbPowerAmp in any way. Does that make sense?
So, once a completely accurate rip is finished, the Trim Silence DSP removes the redundant silence at the end (and in some cases, the start!) of every track. This is very important for a radio station, or for any other use where you might want to crossfade or segue tracks. A lot of radio playout automation software relies on tracks NOT containing silence at the end (the excellent mAirList is a notable expection to this). So, if your CD ripper application doesn't remove the silence for you, guess what? YOU (or your staff) waste many hours removing it manually, and (usually) less accurately than dbPowerAmp's Trim Silence DSP would have done the same job.
If you are using (for example) Winamp to play maybe a hundred tracks for a party in sequence and segue (crossfade) between each track in the list, the result WILL play those annoying it-sounds-like-a-CD two-second gaps; but if you use the Trim Silence DSP while ripping, the end result is much more pleasing and sounds much more like a DJ is playing the music! :D
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