Re: Looking for advice on glacial, on/off reading pattern with secure ripping
See, in typing it out and looking at this, it makes more sense than leaving it to just roll around as an unvoiced theory in my head. It gets muddied again, however, when I read where Spoon advocates for C2 and trusts it over running without.
I think I mostly do, the operative word there being "think". Verification by consensus of machines, which works great for repeatable events like mass produced CDs.
I do, however, have a couple CDs that didn't turn up in there. I think one may have been a very new release, though.
Now, the thing I've never known so much as presumed/predicted is how they arrive at the golden reference. It's reasonable to guess that they use a meticulous scan of a perfectly clean disc, and all that. But, since I'm not on that end of the process, I don't know exactly what or how. And, dammit, now I'm curious. LOL!
Oh, probably. It kinda comes with the territory. I've always drifted into the very bottom of the Asperger's spectrum. It doesn't help that my music tastes run towards the obscure so much that a solid 35% of what I choose to listen to isn't on Spotify or iTunes. As a result, I logically get concerned with preservation of the weird stuff I have and want as precise an archive file as I can mange. But, I've also gotten into (semi-)professional music production and mix engineering. That kinda broke me, once. Too much mental effort spent on completing someone's song nobody said would be left to me -- and it was the opener, which sets the expectations for the whole album; after a month of wrangling with that mess (and dreaded learning-as-you-go) it was finished, but my ability to quickly recall commonly known people's names faltered and hasn't really come back in the 4+ years since. I'm sure my 2 years of cyber security training is making matters even worse. LOL!
Point is, yes/no/yes. But, if I have access and ability to make a rip even more accurate, I'm going to chase it down as much as I can. Heh... Dog:Ambulance
See, in typing it out and looking at this, it makes more sense than leaving it to just roll around as an unvoiced theory in my head. It gets muddied again, however, when I read where Spoon advocates for C2 and trusts it over running without.
I think I mostly do, the operative word there being "think". Verification by consensus of machines, which works great for repeatable events like mass produced CDs.
I do, however, have a couple CDs that didn't turn up in there. I think one may have been a very new release, though.
Now, the thing I've never known so much as presumed/predicted is how they arrive at the golden reference. It's reasonable to guess that they use a meticulous scan of a perfectly clean disc, and all that. But, since I'm not on that end of the process, I don't know exactly what or how. And, dammit, now I'm curious. LOL!
Oh, probably. It kinda comes with the territory. I've always drifted into the very bottom of the Asperger's spectrum. It doesn't help that my music tastes run towards the obscure so much that a solid 35% of what I choose to listen to isn't on Spotify or iTunes. As a result, I logically get concerned with preservation of the weird stuff I have and want as precise an archive file as I can mange. But, I've also gotten into (semi-)professional music production and mix engineering. That kinda broke me, once. Too much mental effort spent on completing someone's song nobody said would be left to me -- and it was the opener, which sets the expectations for the whole album; after a month of wrangling with that mess (and dreaded learning-as-you-go) it was finished, but my ability to quickly recall commonly known people's names faltered and hasn't really come back in the 4+ years since. I'm sure my 2 years of cyber security training is making matters even worse. LOL!
Point is, yes/no/yes. But, if I have access and ability to make a rip even more accurate, I'm going to chase it down as much as I can. Heh... Dog:Ambulance
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