http://my.mp3.com/

I use it; I like it.  Spent an afternoon putting in cds, it 
recognized about 80% of them, although hardly any of my classical
cds.  Then I made a playlist of all 547 of them, hit play
(it uses shoutcast for streaming), randomized the list, and 
experienced one of the best mix tapes I've ever had.  :-)

There is also some linux utility that will rip tracks from
cd players that generally are thought to not support ripping.
It has really good error correction or something.  I haven't
tried it because my linux box does not have sound; only my 
winbox does.  I don't remember where it is, but there is 
mention of it on slashdot in a recent article about mp3's 
service.

Curt


On Fri, Feb 11, 2000 at 01:16:07PM -0800, Rodney Mishima wrote:
> Thanks Rob and everyone for the info. Last night, Seth was on a Web site
> that uses CDDB and maintains a repository of MP3s that are already ripped.
> The ideal is that you have already paid the royalties on it and this site
> allows you to listen to your music on the Web where ever you can connect. I
> thought it was something like "MyMP3s.com", but that was not it.
> 
> Rodney
> 
> Rob Hudson wrote:
> 
> > Stephen Hoyle said these things on 20000211.1256:
> > | www.cddb.com
> > |
> > I noticed a script on freshmeat called abcde that allows you to insert a
> > CD into the cdrom, it will rip the tracks, encode them into mp3, get the
> > info from cddb, and make the id3 tags for the mp3 files, all in one
> > stroke of the command line.  Pretty nifty.
> 

Reply via email to