Solved quite some time ago with Rubyripper 0.4.1.
--
Mark Lanctot
'Sean Adams' Response-O-Matic checklist, patent pending!'
(http://forums.slimdevices.com/showpost.php?p=200910&postcount=2)
Mark Lanctot's Profile: http://
Mark Lanctot;197804 Wrote:
> I can't see a reference anywhere in my system to "sdd"-type drives,
> they're all "hdd". However I'll keep looking and try out "sdd"-type
> references in Rubyripper.
>
> I'll also investigate UUIDs, I just put the hdd line in fstab without a
> corresponding UUID, so
smc2911;197802 Wrote:
> This is a long-shot. If you've upgraded I believe that from Edgy onwards
> IDEs drives map to /dev/sdda (etc) rather than /dev/hdda (etc) not just
> SATA drives. This should only related to hard drives, so may be
> completely irrelevant.
I can't see a reference anywhere i
This is a long-shot. If you've upgraded I believe that from Edgy onwards
IDEs drives map to /dev/sdda (etc) rather than /dev/hdda (etc) not just
SATA drives. This should only related to hard drives, so may be
completely irrelevant.
--
smc2911
Mark Lanctot;196895 Wrote:
>
> This has very little to do with SlimServer though, I'll have to
> investigate at the Ubuntu forums. Which is like pulling teeth. I have
> never had a thread of mine generate a single response or even more than
> 10 views.
You just have to give your threads more
Mark Lanctot;196893 Wrote:
> I haven't tried CD burning yet - the CD drive is a burner. I have to
> burn the 7.04 ISOs anyway for installation in my new hardware, so I'll
> find out shortly.
Well it did find the drive, and "pretended" like it burned, but you
can't burn a 680 MB .ISO in 15 secon
Sort of...I still can't access the drive like I used to at /media/cdrom,
media/cdrom0 or media/cdrom1 like I have configured fstab, but I can
access it at /dev/hdd. Not ideal and some programs don't like this,
but Rubyripper does and my DVD-ROM is also working.
I haven't tried CD burning yet - t
Mark, does that mean you've now solved the drive access problem?
--
bukharin
bukharin's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=10859
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=34505
Whoops! Chip, you're on the mailing list so you didn't see my edit:
Mark Lanctot;196676 Wrote:
> Found a fix and it works!
> http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=2335946&postcount=10 although I
> didn't have an albumart_pictures.py file, I had an albumart_images.py
> file, but the fix worked
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> I take it that some component was updated that should not have been.
> Anyway, here is the error that comes up when I try to invoke it from
> the command line:
This may sound stupid (surprise), but try running it from
a different directory. You can do this e
Mark Lanctot;196481 Wrote:
> 2. Album Cover Art Downloader no longer runs.
I take it that some component was updated that should not have been.
Anyway, here is the error that comes up when I try to invoke it from
the command line:
Code:
Traceback (most recent call la
bukharin;196643 Wrote:
> The link you sent reminded me - if you're only using rubyripper to rip,
> you may have hit a known bug with rubyripper whereby it doesn't respect
> your choice of cdrom, and will only rip from the first drive in the
> system. That's why I suggested testing with cdparanoia
The link you sent reminded me - if you're only using rubyripper to rip,
you may have hit a known bug with rubyripper whereby it doesn't respect
your choice of cdrom, and will only rip from the first drive in the
system. That's why I suggested testing with cdparanoia directly from
the command-line.
Partially solved my issue, see:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?p=2500409#post2500409
Kind of incomplete though, but it'll get me by.
--
Mark Lanctot
Mark Lanctot's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.ph
Well, a simple thing to check is whether or not ide-scsi is enabled for
the dvd-rom vs the other drive you're ripping with. On most systems
this will need to be enabled in order for cdparanoia to use the drive.
This is set in the bootloader options (ie in either lilo or grub,
depending on what ubu
bukharin;196570 Wrote:
> fstab is important for mounting discs, but they don't need to be mounted
> in order to rip audio. So there may be a different problem (eg kernel is
> misconfigured). It's probably worth trying to rip with cdparanoia (as a
> command-line tool) to trouble-shoot.
Unfortunat
fstab is important for mounting discs, but they don't need to be mounted
in order to rip audio. So there may be a different problem (eg kernel is
misconfigured). It's probably worth trying to rip with cdparanoia (as a
command-line tool) to trouble-shoot.
Given that this is a totally new problem i
Not as enamoured with Ubuntu today.
I upgraded to Feisty and while there are some nice things:
1. fstab is screwed up. Neither of my optical drives work now. If I
boot into the 2.6.17 kernel I can get my DVD-ROM to work.
2. Album Cover Art Downloader no longer runs.
I'm trying desperately
jeffmeh wrote:
> Robin Bowes;195929 Wrote:
>> One of these days, I'll build in functionality to copy the flac
>> ReplayGain tags into equivalent mp3 tags.
>
> Interesting idea Would the FLAC replaygain adjustment values be
> correct for the mp3 files in all cases? I would think that a lossy
Robin Bowes;195929 Wrote:
> Mark Lanctot wrote:
> > Robin Bowes;195898 Wrote:
> >> Try flac2mp3 - better than Mareo, IMHO. ;)
> >
> > I probably will Robin, thanks. I can't get Rubyripper to encode to
> MP3
> > no matter what I do. I have one last thing to try and then I'm
> through
> > fooli
snarlydwarf wrote:
> (or the little checkbox in Musicbrainz Picard).
...that was it. Earlier, when I said something like "easytag is
the way to go with Linux ID3 editing," I forgot to mention
Picard. I don't often use it (I don't often need it and, when
it first c
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> Robin Bowes;195923 Wrote:
>> Hard drives are plenty fast enough for *all* slimserver-related
>> purposes. What are you doing that requires more speed?
>
> It's primarily a general-purpose desktop and not a dedicated SlimServer
> machine.
Even so, modern hard drives are more
bukharin;195965 Wrote:
> In terms of clearing tags, what version of easytag are you using? I'm
> using 2.0 and it has an option to wipe all tags (file -> remove tags);
> I'm not sure if that removes tags that easytag doesn't normally show.
> It also supports tags such as Composer. Another option
Mark Lanctot;195942 Wrote:
> Whew, I must have a different version. Everything's fine until step 6.
> I couldn't find the option to create WAV at first but it's now in the
> Title menu.
>
> Works perfectly. 24-bit, 48 kHz WAVs.
Oops, I just looked and you're right - my version of dvdrip is a
bukharin;195710 Wrote:
> Type dvdrip at a console
>
> If that works, you can invoke it from kde by (1) using K menu -> run
> command, or (2) using alt-f2, or (3) adding a menu item to your K menu
> (this probably would have been done automagically if you'd found a
> dedicated Suse RPM).
>
> Onc
Pat Farrell;195936 Wrote:
> Two years? In two years, a minimal PC for actual use will have 8 or 16
> CPUs and 16 GB or ram. What part of a computer bought today has any
> value in two years?
> (Except of course, for use as a slimserver hidden in the basement)
Both the DDR memory and the AGP ca
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> and I'm rethinking this. That motherboard offers me a unique
> opportunity - a gradual upgrade over the course of the next year or two
> rather than a huge (expensive) upgrade in about 2 years' time.
Two years? In two years, a minimal PC for actual use will have 8 or 16
CPU
Robin Bowes;195927 Wrote:
> Mark Lanctot wrote:
>
> > I've never really understood why people use so much RAM. 512 MB is
> > plenty for me. I never get into paging unless I open a dozen
> > uncompressed images in GIMP.
>
> Because the OS can use it to cache disk reads, etc.
>
> Plenty of RAM
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> Robin Bowes;195898 Wrote:
>> Try flac2mp3 - better than Mareo, IMHO. ;)
>
> I probably will Robin, thanks. I can't get Rubyripper to encode to MP3
> no matter what I do. I have one last thing to try and then I'm through
> fooling with it.
>
> Can it also do post-processin
Robin Bowes;195923 Wrote:
> Hard drives are plenty fast enough for *all* slimserver-related
> purposes. What are you doing that requires more speed?
It's primarily a general-purpose desktop and not a dedicated SlimServer
machine.
--
Mark Lanctot
---
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> I've never really understood why people use so much RAM. 512 MB is
> plenty for me. I never get into paging unless I open a dozen
> uncompressed images in GIMP.
Because the OS can use it to cache disk reads, etc.
Plenty of RAM can have a more beneficial effect than a fast
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> Robin Bowes;195897 Wrote:
>> Don't use RAID0 - use RAID1.
>
> I'm doing it for speed reasons. Hard drives are just never fast
> enough.
Hard drives are plenty fast enough for *all* slimserver-related
purposes. What are you doing that requires more speed?
R.
_
Robin Bowes;195898 Wrote:
> Try flac2mp3 - better than Mareo, IMHO. ;)
I probably will Robin, thanks. I can't get Rubyripper to encode to MP3
no matter what I do. I have one last thing to try and then I'm through
fooling with it.
Can it also do post-processing? I would like to run a few MP3G
Oh and BTW...I made a decision yesterday. I won't be upgrading my
hardware after all, as much as I'd like to.
This secondary PC (1.2 GHz AMD Duron) running Ubuntu is running pretty
well and I've almost got everything configured just the way I want it.
It's slower than my defunct hardware, sure,
Robin Bowes;195898 Wrote:
> Get more RAM. Buy the maximum supported by the motherboard.
2 GB of DDR2 RAM is -really- expensive right now. It'll cost almost as
much as the CPU.
Also the whole point of that motherboard is that I can reuse my DDR
memory.
I've never really understood why people u
Robin Bowes;195897 Wrote:
> Don't use RAID0 - use RAID1.
I'm doing it for speed reasons. Hard drives are just never fast
enough.
Also I have two 36 GB WD Raptors. They are very fast, but they're too
small for installing an OS on these days. So I might as well use them.
I'd like to continue t
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> I was thinking of going with 'this'
> (http://www.abxzone.com/forums/general-intel-platform-discussions/108282-possible-conroe-setup-opinions.html)
> (Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 or E6700, ASRock 4CoreDual-VSTA along with my
> old 512 MB DDR400 RAM and AGP video card). I want the
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> Balthazar_B;195279 Wrote:
>> Of course if you had a sufficient platform you could run Linux and
>> Windows virtual machines and use each for how it is best suited...
>
> I haven't investigated VM - it's very new. When I first started
> learning all this stuff, it was dual b
Chip Hart;195826 Wrote:
> Mark Lanctot wrote:> I'll have to check out eyed3.
>
> Warning - it's CLI. Which is great and bad, depending on what
> you want.
I'm not scared of the CLI. I'd prefer a GUI, but if the GUI won't do
it, I'll gladly use the CLI.
> If you
> select all
Chip Hart;195852 Wrote:
>
> Check your easytag settings under "ID3 Tag Settings" and you'll
> see the the options for some of this...oh, wait, I don't see it
> there. Geeze, what am I confusing? [I know I have had to strip
> out PLENTY of ID3v1 tags in my library, so I
Chip Hart;195826 Wrote:
> However, if you're still interested in where the errors
> are for CD-cleaning purposes (right), you _should_ be able to
> get the data from grip.
It didn't provide any information to me aside from the animated face as
it ripped. Once the rip/encode was fini
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> Chip: first of all, I'm sorry that your e-mail filter thinks this
> message is spam. ;-)
Me, too. Sorry about that.
> Yes, it is using the same backend...
See my other response. You're quite right and I was mixing
issues. However, if you're still
bukharin wrote:
> I don't think so - rubyripper is using cdparanoia to rip, but as far as
> I can tell, all the fancy stuff it does with comparison of WAVs, log
> generation etc is specific to rubyripper.
I'm sorry - you're quite right about that. I was still thinking
about Mark's
Chip: first of all, I'm sorry that your e-mail filter thinks this
message is spam. ;-)
Chip Hart;195799 Wrote:
> Mark Lanctot wrote:
> > Thanks to bukharin, I tried Rubyripper and I'm very impressed! Feast
> > your eyes on this nice logfile:
>
> ...given that grip and Rubyripper both us
Chip Hart;195799 Wrote:
>
> ...given that grip and Rubyripper both use cdparanoia, I presume
> this data is also available from grip somehow, it's just not
> made apparent. [Don't get me wrong - I'm not a a grip user, I
> prefer abcde - but I get it has data like this fo
mrfantasy;195712 Wrote:
> I have had stability problems with easytag over Samba. Desktop is SLED
> 10, server is a Kuro Box running Gentoo. MP3tag is much better in my
> opinion.
I haven't tried MP3tag so I can't comment on that. However, your setup
really begs the question of why you don't us
I have had stability problems with easytag over Samba. Desktop is SLED
10, server is a Kuro Box running Gentoo. MP3tag is much better in my
opinion.
For ripping I use abcde (which uses cdparanoia). Works really well.
I've gotten the ripping, tagging (initial from freedb) and encoding
done a
haunyack;195695 Wrote:
> I've installed dvd::rip on my Suse 10.2 machine according to the
> readme.
> I have absolutely no idea how to invoke it.
> gulp...help?
Type dvdrip at a console
If that works, you can invoke it from kde by (1) using K menu -> run
command, or (2) using alt-f2, or (3) add
Glad to hear it's going well!
Mark Lanctot;195681 Wrote:
> it did a strange surging seek, going down in speed in steps first, then
> up in speed, before it started ripping. This took a long time, maybe a
> minute, and it didn't say what it was doing.
That's strange, and I wouldn't expect it to
"I use dvdrip, which is reasonably easy to use and quite powerful. I'm
pretty sure it can rip the audio directly into AC3 (it lists "Audio AC3
and PCM passthrough" as one of its features), and I know for sure it can
rip it directly into WAV (on-the-fly"
I've installed dvd::rip on my Suse 10.2 mac
Considerable progress!
Mark Lanctot;195274 Wrote:
> 1. EAC. I gather that the recommended ripper is GRIP. I tried it
> today and liked it. It does seem to try to recover errors and will
> slow down the drive when it encounters problems. But reporting of
> these problems leaves a lot to be d
Mark Lanctot;195280 Wrote:
> I haven't investigated VM - it's very new. When I first started
> learning all this stuff, it was dual boot.
>
> I'll have to do some research to determine whether dual boot or VM is
> better. I would think my proposed CPU would support it although I
> don't know i
Patrick Dixon;195409 Wrote:
> Feisty will be released in a day or two (literally), and has a 2.6.20
> kernel, so it may be worth waiting for that.
Good timing! :-)
Toby Dickenson;195410 Wrote:
> Mark Lanctot wrote:
>
> > 1. EAC. I gather that the recommended ripper is GRIP. I tried it
> >
Mark Lanctot wrote:
> 1. EAC. I gather that the recommended ripper is GRIP. I tried it
> today and liked it. It does seem to try to recover errors and will
> slow down the drive when it encounters problems. But reporting of
> these problems leaves a lot to be desired - it just has a little
>
Mark Lanctot;195404 Wrote:
> I've tried WINE and got it to work for a very simple program. For EAC,
> it wouldn't hurt to try, but the extra software layer between it and
> the optical drive might be troublesome.
>
> Turns out the motherboard I want may only run under the 2.6.18 kernel.
> Edgy
I've tried WINE and got it to work for a very simple program. For EAC,
it wouldn't hurt to try, but the extra software layer between it and
the optical drive might be troublesome.
Turns out the motherboard I want may only run under the 2.6.18 kernel.
Edgy is currently running 2.6.17. Compiling
I too am migrating my stuff from XP to Ubuntu (Dapper at the moment, in
my case).
Have you explored using WINE for your favored Windows programs?
I had some success running EAC under WINE, rather than an emulator, so
this might be worth trying. Latterly, though, EAC is failing to
recognize my o
Pale Blue Ego;195383 Wrote:
> I don't understand the worries about the end of MS support. They are
> the last people I'd rely on if I had a prob with Windows.
My concern is with the end of security updates...and the constant need
for security updates in the first place.
For example, although I
I don't understand the worries about the end of MS support. They are
the last people I'd rely on if I had a prob with Windows.
First thing I do on any Windows box is strip out all the offending
viral cesspools (IE, OE, WMP, Scripting Host, Address Book, Messenger,
Chat, Netmeeting, etc). Then I
Thanks for the help and advice everyone. Keep it coming!
bukharin;195294 Wrote:
> I use dvdrip, which is reasonably easy to use and quite powerful. I'm
> pretty sure it can rip the audio directly into AC3 (it lists "Audio AC3
> and PCM passthrough" as one of its features), and I know for sure i
Another ripper you might want to check out is Rubyripper:
http://wiki.hydrogenaudio.org/index.php?title=Rubyripper
It's a bit rough around the edges, but has better error correction and
logging facilities than grip.
--
bukharin
--
Virtualisation per se doesn't require that much CPU. RAM is definately
required though so the 512MB is way too little if you want to go the VM
route IMHO. Basically you have to options if you use VM and want to have
both Windows and Ubuntu:
1) Use Linux as host and Windows as guest. Makes sense s
Mark Lanctot;195274 Wrote:
>
> [SNIP]...there are some old standbys I just don't want to do without
> and I want to find equivalents.
>
> 1. EAC...
> 2. MAREO...
> 3. Mp3tag...
> 4. MP3Gain...
> [SNIP]
> I really want to make this work now. I've played with Linux for years,
> Ubuntu is the
Mark Lanctot;195274 Wrote:
> 2. MAREO. I'm currently encoding to FLAC, then encoding to MP3, then
> doing MP3Gain analysis and adjustment with this. Is there a Linux
> equivalent or will I have to divide this into a series of steps?
You can encode to FLAC and mp3 easily in one step using abcd
Balthazar_B;195279 Wrote:
> Of course if you had a sufficient platform you could run Linux and
> Windows virtual machines and use each for how it is best suited...
I haven't investigated VM - it's very new. When I first started
learning all this stuff, it was dual boot.
I'll have to do some re
Of course if you had a sufficient platform you could run Linux and
Windows virtual machines and use each for how it is best suited...
--
Balthazar_B
Balthazar_B's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=73
Well my SlimServer died almost a month ago now - the gory details are
'here'
(http://www.abxzone.com/forums/general-intel-platform-discussions/108255-system-death-troubleshooting-advice-needed.html).
Since then, I've got my SlimServer back up using some secondary
hardware I had, a 1.2 GHz Duron m
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