R. Bernstein wrote:
Peter Creath writes:
> On Dec 10, 2007 4:45 AM, R. Bernstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > In your situation, it sounds like you are writing DTS-encoded
> > information using Redbook formatting. I don't doubt for what you are
> > doing this is convenient for you. But I'm not sure this is common
> > practice, either. If there some document you can point to that
> > indicates this common practice or is part of some standard, that would
> > make a more compelling case for change.
>
> See, e.g., <http://www.dtsonline.com/shopping/catalogue/music_detail.php?upc=710215442426>.
> Before SACD and DVD-Audio made serious inroads, DTS was producing DTS
> CDs.
Ok. I guess then many discs don't have a gap lead-in. So the question
then is what to do? Perhaps an option inside the cdio object to
disable the 2 second CDDA lead-in?
Hi again!
It turns out the library is correct. I managed to read and decode the Q
sub-channel. All of the absolute addresses in the Q sub-channel are +2
minutes for the lead-in. There is no need for an option.
Cue sheets just happen to be a special case. When you create a cue
sheet, you subtract the 2 minutes because you don't generally save the
lead-in when you rip a CD.
I have another question I'll introduce in another thread.
Thank you.
Regards,
Rob