I was wondering is there a way to rip 3 to 6 CDs in parallel
to perhaps speed up the process of handing hundreds of CDs
other than running an instance of the software/process in
separate desktops (Windows 10 or MacOS)?
Is this recommended, will there be any flaws or cross contamination
of the ripped .flac files? So far I have been doing this with no
problems but can get confused as to which desktop is or has processed
which CD. I may not be that good at multitasking.
Can the software run in one windows and see all the CDs/(or DVD drives)
in one process of the software running?
I was able to do this in iTunes and even Windows Media Player
where all of the attached DVD/CD drives show up in one instance
of those programs running and I can click and work on each CD
as needed ripping them into their appropriate and separate directories
on the hard drive and I could monitor the progress in one window/desktop
and thus giving a simulation of things running faster and in parallel.
I know when I ripped the 1300 CDs back in April, prior to that I estimated
it would take 3 weeks to complete the project but once I was running
or ripping 6 to 7 CDs back to back using those DVD drives, things went
faster than expected and all were ripped using iTunes to .wav files
within 1 week.
Just trying to make this easier and go faster.
Well thanks...
to perhaps speed up the process of handing hundreds of CDs
other than running an instance of the software/process in
separate desktops (Windows 10 or MacOS)?
Is this recommended, will there be any flaws or cross contamination
of the ripped .flac files? So far I have been doing this with no
problems but can get confused as to which desktop is or has processed
which CD. I may not be that good at multitasking.
Can the software run in one windows and see all the CDs/(or DVD drives)
in one process of the software running?
I was able to do this in iTunes and even Windows Media Player
where all of the attached DVD/CD drives show up in one instance
of those programs running and I can click and work on each CD
as needed ripping them into their appropriate and separate directories
on the hard drive and I could monitor the progress in one window/desktop
and thus giving a simulation of things running faster and in parallel.
I know when I ripped the 1300 CDs back in April, prior to that I estimated
it would take 3 weeks to complete the project but once I was running
or ripping 6 to 7 CDs back to back using those DVD drives, things went
faster than expected and all were ripped using iTunes to .wav files
within 1 week.
Just trying to make this easier and go faster.
Well thanks...
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