If you're using original CD'S then there's a good chance they'll show up 99% of the time.

That's the nice thing about Exact Audio Copy - if you're looking to copy audio discs - it copies them exactly and you'll see it, no more inexact matches when looking up in a database with an Exact copy of a CD for example.

Exact Audio Copy also uses the Accuraterip function that makes the ripping process that little bit easier, other software uses this too including XLD for Mac and EEzy CD Converter for Windows.



On 11/11/2016 7:14 PM, John Covici wrote:
I use exact audio copy all the time to do just this.  I had to fool
with the configs to get it to do flac instead of mp3, but it works
great.  You might still run into cds not showing up in the database,
but that's a different program.

On Thu, 10 Nov 2016 23:58:45 -0500,
Chris Skarstad wrote:
             Hey folks

Subject line basicly tells the story.  I have some cd's that were
sent to me, and i'd like to rip them to the pc, but i'd like to
make them sound as good as possible.  I am a huge fan of FLAC, or
free lossless audio codec files.  The file size is a bit larger
but the sound quality is supurb if you're listening on a good
system.  Looking online, I saw many people mention a program
called Exact Audio copy, which has been around for years, does
anyone on here have experience using that?  My hope is to convert
the cd's to flac files, and use the cd database to grab the song
titles from the internet.  I was thinking of using CDEX, but
sadly, i've never been able to get the CDDB, or Gracenote

  servers to find anything.  Anyone know anything about this?
Thanks for any ideas folks.
Chris



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