The time has come to spill the beans on AccurateRip:
Starting with dBpowerAMP Music Conveter Release 10, AccurateRip will be included - this is a clever database of all CDs in existance. Hopefully the database will populate quickly after initial launch - the database is designed for about 1 Million CD discs.
Initially AccurateRip is 'Unconfigured', this means the program does not known the Offset value of the drive, as soon as a recognised CD is inserted (recognised means any CD ripped by any other user who has AccurateRip configured) AccurateRip will offer to AutoFind the offset. Once that is found AccurateRip is enabled, each time a disc is ripped it is compared with the results in the database - it can inform you wether it is accurate. Once a month the database can be automatically updated (the disc you have ripped are added for other peoples benefit).
So say 100 people have ripped Madonnas Erotica - all results are stored on my computer - the one of the highest match (true one) is used to form the database - so when you get around to Ripping this disc it will offer a Confidence of 100** (see below)
Say only one person has ripped the disc before, well the system works in your favour - if everything goes ok it will match the existing one and it will give a confidence of 1, but what if they do not match - well it means either their or your rip is wrong, to find out which see below.
Say you rip a disc that is not in the database? at the end it will tell you, now the beauty of this system is you can verify the rip using your own result (the last rip is in your database), preferabbly on a different CD drive (my research has pointed that different drives tend not to (I have not come across one case yet) return the same result, but the same drive ripping and re-ripping the same disc can, I have seen it!).
** Really if 100 people submitted results for 1 disc, I would expect a number of them to be wrong, these are filtered out (the nice fact that one scratch on someone elses CD will not be the same scratch on your CD), so from a 100 it might have 67 that match - the confidence would then be 67.
Starting with dBpowerAMP Music Conveter Release 10, AccurateRip will be included - this is a clever database of all CDs in existance. Hopefully the database will populate quickly after initial launch - the database is designed for about 1 Million CD discs.
Initially AccurateRip is 'Unconfigured', this means the program does not known the Offset value of the drive, as soon as a recognised CD is inserted (recognised means any CD ripped by any other user who has AccurateRip configured) AccurateRip will offer to AutoFind the offset. Once that is found AccurateRip is enabled, each time a disc is ripped it is compared with the results in the database - it can inform you wether it is accurate. Once a month the database can be automatically updated (the disc you have ripped are added for other peoples benefit).
So say 100 people have ripped Madonnas Erotica - all results are stored on my computer - the one of the highest match (true one) is used to form the database - so when you get around to Ripping this disc it will offer a Confidence of 100** (see below)
Say only one person has ripped the disc before, well the system works in your favour - if everything goes ok it will match the existing one and it will give a confidence of 1, but what if they do not match - well it means either their or your rip is wrong, to find out which see below.
Say you rip a disc that is not in the database? at the end it will tell you, now the beauty of this system is you can verify the rip using your own result (the last rip is in your database), preferabbly on a different CD drive (my research has pointed that different drives tend not to (I have not come across one case yet) return the same result, but the same drive ripping and re-ripping the same disc can, I have seen it!).
** Really if 100 people submitted results for 1 disc, I would expect a number of them to be wrong, these are filtered out (the nice fact that one scratch on someone elses CD will not be the same scratch on your CD), so from a 100 it might have 67 that match - the confidence would then be 67.
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