EAC lets you pick the source and has AccurateRIP. dbPoweramp doesn't actually have a secure mode as the programmers are lazy and handwave it away claiming true block by block reading wears down drives. DB poweramp has no way to actually verify a rip other than comparing checksums to those already done in the accuraterip database and you don't know if they are accurate until someone rips it using program with a true secure mode such as EAC or XLD for Macs. Drives are cheap (20-40 bucks) so **** them. Use EAC and make sure your rips are good the first time.
I read this about DB Poweramp. Is this true?
Collapse
X
-
I read this about DB Poweramp. Is this true?
Tags: None -
Re: I read this about DB Poweramp. Is this true?
What this seem to say is that EAC will check the CD against itself, while dBp will check it against other CDs. I was hoping that with my Pioneer's Pure Read (if it has hard time reading, it will try again with the laser pointed at different angle I believe) will make up for the dBp not checking the CD against itself. Would you say this would work? -
-
Re: I read this about DB Poweramp. Is this true?
So much miss information there...dBpoweramp had a secure ripping ability before we invented AccurateRip, so for the last 15 years. Half of accuraterip is populated by discs which dBpoweramp submitted, so it does not rely on EAC.
XLD will not submit to AccurateRip, only EAC and dBpoweramp can do that.Comment
-
Re: I read this about DB Poweramp. Is this true?
What this seem to say is that EAC will check the CD against itself, while dBp will check it against other CDs. I was hoping that with my Pioneer's Pure Read (if it has hard time reading, it will try again with the laser pointed at different angle I believe) will make up for the dBp not checking the CD against itself. Would you say this would work?Comment
Comment