Michael, or anyone else who is experienced with Easy CD DA and cares to take 
a shot at my questions.

1. Easy CD claims to do text writing. How does one go about that in this 
program.

2. Let's say that I have an album where I want varying pause lengths between 
tracks. Maybe between tracks 1 and 2, I want the customary 2 seconds. But 
let's say that between tracks 4 and 5, I want no pause at all, and between 7 
and 8 I want 1 second. Can I accomplish that with Easy CD DA?

Thanks for any answers you might offer. I want to continue upgrading with 
technology, but Nero's price tag has me looking around for possible 
alternatives.

Larry
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael J. Schwandt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2007 1:42 PM
Subject: Re: Easy CD DA Extractor, my ipinion for what its worth


> Hi Dane and all,
> I have used easy cd da extractor for years.  Yes, it has come a long
> way.  I am not sure about the drive offset, but I do know you can
> configure the encoding formats.  At the bottom left of the window there
> is a configure button, which when clicked will take you to another
> window where you can choose the bit rate  then on the same window, there
> is a edit button which will allow costumazation.  i use highest quality
> and auto to choose the mode.  there are alot of other settings also
> available on the edit page.  Hope this helps some.
>
> Mike,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
>
> Dane Trethowan wrote:
>> Hi folks!
>> Ok, I registered Easy CD DA Extractor today and I've been playing
>> with it for much of the day so thought it time I offered some
>> comparisons with the ripping software I've been using which has been
>> EAC (Exact Audio Copy) and Max (on the Mac and my LINUX system).
>> First and foremost, there is no doubt whatever that Easy CD DA
>> Extractor has come one hell of a long and mighty way since I last
>> tried it some years ago however it still falls short in several areas
>> if accuracy in ripping from CD'S is what you're after and considering
>> that Exact Audio Copy and Max are "freeware" applications and Easy CD
>> DA Extractor isn't then this in my view is some cause for concern.
>> Where the accuracy shortfall occurs is in the fact (it seems) that
>> you cannot set the read and write offsets for your drive, that's very
>> important for CD Ripping and CD burning, now please someone correct
>> me if I'm wrong, I'd in fact relish being wrong because I cannot
>> believe that such a good product as Easy CD DA Extractor wouldn't
>> have this feature. So with that shortcoming out of the way I looked
>> at the various file formats on offer for output.
>> Yep, no doubt again, quite a range but unless I'm not looking
>> thoroughly enough the formats it seems to me aren't customisable. For
>> example let's take MP3 layer 3, all you get when selecting the
>> options are 128K, 256K, 9 levels of VBR etc and that's it. Again,
>> unless I'm missing something then this is a very poor show. So you
>> pick 128K for example, what quality mode is used here for the
>> encoder? Is it stereo, mono or joint stereo the encoder will be
>> encoding in? What sample rate is going to be used? All this
>> information seems to be determined for you and (whilst most will be
>> content to leave things at that) I'm not because I find optimizing
>> your MP3 encoder for various situations can save you a whole heap of
>> space and a whole heap of trouble whilst not compremising on good
>> audio quality. Further to this when you select one of the VBR modes
>> offered, which VBR method will the encoder use, the "old" or the
>> "new" method? The "new" method is indeed faster but the "old" method
>> (whilst slower) is of a far better quality and there are other VBR
>> settings which should be available which don't seem to be, 2 quality
>> settings for example whereas Easy CD DA Extractor only allows the
>> access to one.
>> Now to the "Format Conversion" section, again very nicely laid out
>> but one annoyance here and perhaps this will be fixed in later
>> versions. One would think for instance that if you had say a Wave and
>> Cue pair of files (as generated by many rippers including EAC, Max
>> Ripper and even Easy CD DA Extractor itself), you should therefore be
>> able to open the cue file which would therefore in tern open the
>> associated Wave file and you should be able to convert the content to
>> MP3 tracks or whatever, not so it seems which is a crying shame.
>> So there you have it, some of my thoughts on Easy CD DA Extractor but
>> its still worth supporting at $49.00.
>>
>>
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