R13 requests / suggestions
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
We do not turn it on by default as not many drives can rip HTOAComment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
Sorry, my bad about the "default" phrase: Is there an option for me to choose "Always rip HTOA with this drive" without checking every time? (Should be such an option for Batch Ripper, I think.)Last edited by Porcus; February 19, 2008, 09:00 PM.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
I don't think the option can be relied on 100% of the time, in EAC you have to manually set the start time, this is a smart guess which is likely to be wrong on copy protected discsComment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
It seems to me it is not dealt with in Batch Ripper. I would at least have wanted a flag, so that I can detect a HTOA disc and manually rip that track afterwards. (I'd like discs with non-audio content to be flagged as well.)Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
HTOA is not delt at all with Batch Ripper.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
OUCH. Yes, we DEFINITELY need to be able to flag these discs so that they can be ripped separately.
Wouldn't one way to deal with this be to look and see if there is meta-data for that track? If there is, its almost certainly HTOA and can be ripped.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
HTOA would never have meta data, the track does not exist.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
If HTOA tracks are the ones often referred to, such as Songs in the Key of X, and identified in EAC as the first track in red, then in fact they often, almost always have had meta data from freedb.
And what do you mean, they do not exist? They are just hidden.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
No it is the track before that red one (my understanding of EAC is not 100%), the track 0 cannot have a name in any meta data database as it has no name on the insert, it is hidden.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
The track before the red one? No, the red one, in my experience, has always come before the first named track. Often, there is actually a title to the song. The band may play it in live sets or fans find out the name elsewhere, but often there is still a name.Comment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
On the other hand, I don't fully understand why the batch ripper or the cd ripper don't automatically *try* to get the HTOA.
While most drives can't do it, they'll typically either a) error out at the attempt or b) appear to succeed but return null audio values. At the very worst case, the batch ripper should be able to be configured to automatically reject discs that appear to have HTOA and note that reason in the logs so that the operator can use the cd ripper to manually extract them.
Riptastic! has had support for HTOA for years now. On drives that support HTOA, it would automatically extract it, giving it a generic title of Track 00 (or something) similar since there is never metadata for the track (it's not part of the cddb standard, from what I understand).
-brendanComment
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Re: R13 requests / suggestions
EAC successfully rips HTOA into WAV or FLAC image (tested a couple of days ago on my Sony XL1 changer, I may do further tests if anyone requests it).
For Batch Ripper purposes, I definitely think that the HTOA should be read, and if it does not rip properly -- or there is a risk that it returns zeroes -- then the disc should be flagged. Same goes for discs containing non-audio tracks. For batch ripping you need at least logs to rely on, and a batch ripper which pretends that everything is OK is worse than one which rejects these discs.Comment
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