Hi, I've done quite a bit of reading in these forums but this is my first post.
I think dMC is close to becoming my "go to" music encoder, but one missing feature makes me want to keep using Monkey's Audio to convert my APEs to lossy codecs like MP3.
The missing feature: Being able to have two encoding tasks going on at once. Monkey's Audio just lets you choose how many simultaneous jobs you want to allow. This is great for someone like me with a Core2 Duo chip!
I know Spoon mentioned on another thread that v12, due out early in 07, will support dual-core processors. This sounds like something unnecessarily fancy. Monkey's Audio can peg both of my cores at 100% use just by encoding two files at once, and the speedup is addictive!
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Edit: A clever reader may ask me why, when I have a lot of music to encode, I don't do half of it in one batch, and while that's still running, start encoding the second half in a second process.
Well, I tried that. Sure enough, it maxes out my CPUs at 100%, but I think it confuses either dMC or the external encoder (I've tried now with oggenc and lame). What happens is that some of the new files end up being size 0. I even tried this with both batches in different folders, so that the temp files don't trip over each other, but the 0-size thing kept happening.
I think dMC is close to becoming my "go to" music encoder, but one missing feature makes me want to keep using Monkey's Audio to convert my APEs to lossy codecs like MP3.
The missing feature: Being able to have two encoding tasks going on at once. Monkey's Audio just lets you choose how many simultaneous jobs you want to allow. This is great for someone like me with a Core2 Duo chip!
I know Spoon mentioned on another thread that v12, due out early in 07, will support dual-core processors. This sounds like something unnecessarily fancy. Monkey's Audio can peg both of my cores at 100% use just by encoding two files at once, and the speedup is addictive!
-----
Edit: A clever reader may ask me why, when I have a lot of music to encode, I don't do half of it in one batch, and while that's still running, start encoding the second half in a second process.
Well, I tried that. Sure enough, it maxes out my CPUs at 100%, but I think it confuses either dMC or the external encoder (I've tried now with oggenc and lame). What happens is that some of the new files end up being size 0. I even tried this with both batches in different folders, so that the temp files don't trip over each other, but the 0-size thing kept happening.
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