Lately, I've been downloading and exploring a number of programs for 
ripping, burning and copying music.  And one thing I've noticed while 
reading the documentation for these applications.  That's that they don't 
all agree with, who was it, I think Keith, who in the course of describing 
how to best configure the ripping settings in CDex, said that on the fly 
ripping was to be avoided in favor of the slower method of writing a file 
(or "image," or whatever is right to say; I've seen it put both ways now). 
as I understand it, this is so that if there's some sort of flaw in the 
material being ripped, then the program will catch it and somehow rectify 
the error prior to writing the track to disk.  I think that's the idea, 
right?

Well, in at least one of the programs I've been trying-- I think it's the 
Easy CD-DA Extractor that everyone's been speaking highly of, the developer 
himself, in the instructions, recommends the on-the-fly method, explicitly, 
as he explains how to set everything for optimal ripping quality.

A moment ago, I used CDex to rip all the tracks from a CD to disk, and was 
reminded as I waited, and waited, and waited, just how much extra time the 
slower method required.  I could enjoy having this procedure go faster.

What I'd like to know is, just what sorts of errors are supposed to be 
avoided by using the slower method, and where in the sequence are those 
errors expected to come from?  I mean, if it's in case your CD is faulty in 
some way, then I'm going to just set it for on the fly.  Because I know the 
condition of most of my music CDs, and have little reason to suspect that 
CDex is likely to be ripping faulty tracks to disk without my knowing that 
there's something wrong with that CD.

Any advice Any ideas on this?  Am I not understanding that it's common in 
this ripping procedure for CDs to be corrupted or damaged in ways you can't 
know if you've only been hearing it on your stereo or computer?  Or are 
flaws and errors introduced at some other stage that I don't understand 
about?

Thanks.  I'd love to speed the process up.

And if anyone can speak to the same idea in relation to *burning* CDs, this, 
too, would interest me.
Thanks,
Daniel



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