The first copy of White Lillies Island I bought used I trashed because I thought it was bad; I didn't know anything about this disc possibly being infected with this problem:
"White Lilies Island uses Israeli technology company Midbar's Cactus Data Shield to prevent the disc from being played in a PC CD-ROM drive. The encoding process systematically corrupts the music stored on the disc. A hi-fi CD player's error correction mechanism can compensate for the corrupt data and recreate the sound to a level that Midbar claims is undetectable by the listener. Put the CD into a PC, however, and the drive will pick up the corrupt and claim the disc is unreadable."
I picked up another copy yesterday and ripping it is turning out to be a nightmare trying to figure out if it is ripping properly? The disc looks to be fine physically, but if I rip secure it wants to rip thousands of frames on tracks, some of the tracks report secure, others don't. If I rip on burst, I get different readings each time on some tracks and none of them match Accuraterip. All of the various settings rip extremely slow with speeds ranging between .9x and 1.4x during the entire rip. The previous disc I had ripped in the same slow manner. And then there's "defective by design." Is this when that setting should be used?
How do you tell when a CD has or may have this kind of problem?
"White Lilies Island uses Israeli technology company Midbar's Cactus Data Shield to prevent the disc from being played in a PC CD-ROM drive. The encoding process systematically corrupts the music stored on the disc. A hi-fi CD player's error correction mechanism can compensate for the corrupt data and recreate the sound to a level that Midbar claims is undetectable by the listener. Put the CD into a PC, however, and the drive will pick up the corrupt and claim the disc is unreadable."
I picked up another copy yesterday and ripping it is turning out to be a nightmare trying to figure out if it is ripping properly? The disc looks to be fine physically, but if I rip secure it wants to rip thousands of frames on tracks, some of the tracks report secure, others don't. If I rip on burst, I get different readings each time on some tracks and none of them match Accuraterip. All of the various settings rip extremely slow with speeds ranging between .9x and 1.4x during the entire rip. The previous disc I had ripped in the same slow manner. And then there's "defective by design." Is this when that setting should be used?
How do you tell when a CD has or may have this kind of problem?
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