If the CD driver is not on a flat surface but slighted slanted, could that affect the quality of the rip?
CD driver not on completely flat surface
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
If you think of CD audio systems in cars (slanted, bumpy enviroment) or sometimes even vertical integration of drives in computers, you can imagine, that drives are not as sensible as one would think.
Dat EiComment
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
not sensible or even sensitive!Comment
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
I know, Gary. :-)
Dat EiComment
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
As one who struggled with Latin, then Spanish in High School (Hey, that's why I become an Inguneer!) (To this day, I remember only about a dozen words in Spanish, I can count to six.)I have always been totally awed when I run into multilingual people. I worked with a lot of them in my days at the TV network, and have known quite a number of multilingual foreign students from my days helping a college radio station. I couldn't imagine being a native speaker of one language taking college courses in another. And these guys were flourishing, on the dean's list. The ones who most impressed me were native speakers of non-latin based languages. Chinese, Korean, various African languages, where the colonial power wasn't England. Some of these guys were fluent in six or more languages.
And then a year ago I toured Spain and Portugal on my own for three weeks. Spain, I'm glad I had Google Translate on my phone, although there were actually plenty of English speakers. Portugal, everyone also spoke English. Everyone! And I happened to wander around a University campus in Portugal during their "freshman week" (brought back memories, things like this are obviously world-wide...) Anyway, I talked to quite a few (very bright) students. They all spoke English, most unaccented idiomatic English. I asked where they came from? Portugal. Had they lived in an English speaking country? No, they grew up right there in Portugal. Made me feel so inadequate. I had learned how to say Yes and No in Portuguese.
Back to CD drives, Most any computer drive will work in any position. You'll have problems inserting the CD if it is upside down... BUT, don't bump or shake them while they are reading media. You are likely to get read errors. I speak from experience, from early on ripping my CDs to m4a for my Ipod with Winamp while my laptop was actually in my lap, bouncing around. A bunch of bad rips...Comment
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
Sadly I haven't taken this as inspiration and been motivated to learn a second language.Comment
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Re: CD driver not on completely flat surface
Thanks for the compliments, but I'm everything but not a language genius. If my english teachers could read your lines, they would be more than astonished and rub their eyes - believe me. I've started with Latin in the 5th class and have struggled with this dead language for six long years. English has been my second foreign language, starting in the 7th class, but at that time I had enough problems just to get along with the first one. I could have chosen French or Old Greek as an alternative in the 9th class, but I've decided to strengthen my favorite subjects math and physics instead. This decision has been one of the fundamental ones in my life and has prepared my way to a one year study of physics before I switched over to study computer science. So you see I'm not as affin to foreign languages as you might think. I've learned my most import language lesson outside of the school: you learnd most of a language, if you try to communicate (reading/writing as well as listening/talking) with people.
Enough about me and of off topic...
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