--- David Collett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, this is a challenge. I am the author of mp3fs, and a major
> challenge was to predict final file size accurately. This is why
> mp3fs
> only supports CBR mp3 and not VBR mp3 or ogg (which is inherently
> VBR).
> Is there a 'CBR' flac encoding mech
Hi All,
On Tue, Sep 18, 2007 at 06:04:59PM -0700, Stephen F. Booth wrote:
>> I think that what I actually want is for the operating systems to use
>> .flac
>> instead. Similar to what Mac OS X does with .aiff. This should probably
>> have been posted in the advocacy emailing list instead.
>
> Thi
On 9/19/07, Stephen F. Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is an interesting idea. There already is a FUSE filesystem
> called mp3fs (http://mp3fs.sourceforge.net/) which can dynamically
> transcode files from FLAC to MP3. Perhaps someone should write flacfs?
It is an interesting concept.
>
On 19/09/2007, Daniel Aleksandersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> thought. What I wanted was an easier way to do drag 'n' drop music files
> from CDs onto the local system and then have those files encoded with FLAC.
>
> I think that what I actually want is for the operating systems to use .flac
> i
On 2007-09-19, Stephen wrote:
> > I think that what I actually want is for the operating systems to
> > use .flac nstead. Similar to what Mac OS X does with .aiff. This should
> > probably have been posted in the advocacy emailing list instead.
>
> This is an interesting idea. There already is a FU
I think that what I actually want is for the operating systems to
use .flac
instead. Similar to what Mac OS X does with .aiff. This should
probably
have been posted in the advocacy emailing list instead.
This is an interesting idea. There already is a FUSE filesystem
called mp3fs (http://
Hi again list,
I have given the matter of supporting .cda as input format some more
thought. What I wanted was an easier way to do drag 'n' drop music files
from CDs onto the local system and then have those files encoded with FLAC.
As of now most operating systems displays files on CDs as .cda
On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 01:10:09 +0200
"Harry Sack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> does anybody know why dvd use files for audio and video but audio cd's not?
> What could be the reason for this?
> e.g. they could make a file for each track and just put them on an
> audio cd and make cd players compatib
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 02:53:57PM -0700, Ralph Giles wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 05:35:04PM -0400, Dan Pritts wrote:
>
> > the format for CD-ROM sets aside space for error correction and
> > therefore has less available for data.
>
> Red Book CD Audio still has error correction. Otherwise y
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 05:35:04PM -0400, Dan Pritts wrote:
> the format for CD-ROM sets aside space for error correction and
> therefore has less available for data.
Red Book CD Audio still has error correction. Otherwise you'd *really*
notice the scratches.
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 01:10:09AM
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 01:10:09AM +0200, Harry Sack wrote:
> does anybody know why dvd use files for audio and video but audio cd's not?
> What could be the reason for this?
the format for CD-ROM sets aside space for error correction and
therefore has less available for data.
CD audio does not h
does anybody know why dvd use files for audio and video but audio cd's not?
What could be the reason for this?
e.g. they could make a file for each track and just put them on an
audio cd and make cd players compatible with this format. So for me it
has always been a mystery why audio cd's work this
--- Daniel Aleksandersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> I would really like to see support for .cda as input files. The cda
> format is the one used on regular audio CDs.
if the .cda files appeared as regular files in the filesystem and
implemented enough of the POSIX stream interface
CDA is not a file format. It's just a "shortcut" in windows. CD
Ripping requires device-level SCSI communications via the Device Driver
API (DeviceIoControl) and is way out of the scope of FLAC. Use Exact
Audio Copy or another ripping program to do this.
Daniel Aleksandersen wrote:
Hi list
What are you using for FLAC now, Daniel? flac.exe? Or (one of) the
Windows GUI apps?
I suppose you realize that flac.exe probably won't allow drag and
drop encoding.
Why don't you contact one of the authors of the PC Windows GUI apps
to suggest this feature? That's the only place it will h
On 2007-09-13, Ivo wrote:
> On 9/13/07, Daniel Aleksandersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> > I know that. However when you put an audio CD in a computer you will
> > see them as files with the .cda extension. Supporting this 'format'
> > would make encoding simpler as users would not need to 'rip'
Those .cda files do not appear on Mac OS X. Instead, when you put in
an audio CD, the operating system provide .aiff files with the audio
data bytes in CD format. FLAC supports AIFF, and Mac OS X supports
AIFF, so perhaps you should find a plugin for your operating system
which presents A
On 9/13/07, Daniel Aleksandersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I know that. However when you put an audio CD in a computer you will see
> them as files with the .cda extension. Supporting this 'format' would make
> encoding simpler as users would not need to 'rip' to a format, but could
> drag and d
On 2007-09-13, Brian wrote:
> On Sep 13, 2007, at 12:08, Daniel Aleksandersen wrote:
>> I would really like to see support for .cda as input files. The cda
>> format
>> is the one used on regular audio CDs.
>>
>> Support for this format would make it even easier to encode to FLAC
>> from CDs
>
>
You are mistaken, Daniel. Regular audio CDs do not use any kind of
"file format"
CDDA consists of a stream of audio data with metadata codes in a
bitstream - there are no files, only a continuous stream of bits,
frames, blocks, etc.
The .cda files that you see are created by converting the r
Is this really necessary?
-- Forwarded Message --
Subject: RE: [Flac-dev] Support .cda as input files (Zaep Key:
fc344993.46e98b8a.72666fe1)
Date: Thursday 13. September 2007
From: "bbilbrey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Daniel Aleksandersen" <[E
Hi list,
I would really like to see support for .cda as input files. The cda format
is the one used on regular audio CDs.
Support for this format would make it even easier to encode to FLAC from CDs
--
Daniel Aleksandersen
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