On 28/01/18 01:04 AM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Martin McCormick wrote:
cdparanoia [...] plays but you lose the individual track boundaries as
you see in the listing above.
I guess you'd need to read the tracks one by one, like
cdparanoia -d $drivespec "1-1" track_1.wav
cdparanoia -d $drivespec "2-2" track_2.wav
and so on up to number 20.
Not at all. The -B (batch) option will automatically generate one file
per track.
Lately I've started using icedax, a spinoff of cdda2wav which has
replaced it in Stretch. To rip an entire disk:
icedax -D /dev/sr0 -x -B -O wav
I like ISO 9660 better than CD-DA. But it is always a good feeling when
the riddles get less and the insight grows.
My CD player, however, likes CD-DA much better. Insists on it,
actually. :-)
--
cgi...@surfnaked.ca (Charlie Gibbs)