This question's a bit old, but I still wanted to chime in...I used
Audicity for ripping cassettes a while back and it worked fine though
it had a bit of a learning curve to it. I did have an issue with my
(older) hardware where recording would sometimes die on it -- running
out of memory was likely.

Eventually I ran across another program for this -- "Sound Recorder and
Editor" from http://www.polderbits.com . I found it to have a much
simpler interface, much easier to use in general, and easier on memory.
It's not free but has a 2 week trial where you can rip as much you can.
Definately worth checking out...

Here's some bullet points from their website...
Transfer lp to CD and create your own CD's 
Clean clicks, pops and crackle from your vinyl recordings 
Reduce noise from your tape recordings 
Enhance overall sound quality with our equalizer 
Convert your files from mp3 to wav and vice versa 
Edit your existing mp3 or wav sound files splitting recordings into
multiple tracks 
Use a recording timer to record e.g. (Internet) radio broadcasts


-- 
eflat
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