What is this your selling your vinyl? Any chance I can get in on that? I'm looking to expand my vinyl collection.
I'll be happy to do that. Seriously. Rather deal with people I know and spare all the bs that goes with the e market place. I'm slowly building up a pile for sale once they are cleaned and ripped. It will get real in a couple of months. I'm working on getting my website functional ( quietvinyl.com # shameless plug ) and loading up on shipping supplies and what not. That and I got to get a mix done real quick. If it goes as planned, it will be sourced from vinyl rips. Those are the priorities.
Now that I'm going to be a seller of my vinyl, finding discogs has also got me interested in buying some vinyl and all the hard to find stuff that I can ever think of is there, CD's included at very nice prices.
What is this your selling your vinyl? Any chance I can get in on that? I'm looking to expand my vinyl collection.
I had taken all my CDs and methodically ripped them to ALAC (Apple lossless) but then when I subscribed to iTunes Match there was a lot of hocus pocus going on and I don't trust that my versions are still from my CDs. For instance, their version of "Welcome Back My Friends" by ELP has a studio "Hoedown" in place of the live version, and the tags on the version now in my library show me that it's the Apple replacement of my original. GRRRRRRRR
I'm finding it impossible to be the Apple Fanboy I was twenty years ago. The gimmick used to be that it just worked. Now, there's such chaos to their software that I really can't trust them anymore.
I'm totally nothing but wav files using foobar for my media player, but wav files play in just about any player. The only drawback to wav is that there is no metadata and there is lot's of typing when ripping vinyl, but they cannot be hijacked like Apple has done to so many people. My first, last and only taste of Apple and ITunes was years ago when I had to install it on a puter to help set up a friend's IPod. It immediately tried to take over my computer like a virus. I worked hard to get it out and IIRC, had to reimage the C drive to finally get rid of it.
After plenty of horsing around, I picked dbpoweramp for my CD ripper. Best thing I ever did. Quality ripper with optical drive offset compensation, file verification and wonderful metadata features that will stick to wav files as long as the program is maintained on the ripping computer. You will lose the md on wav files when you transfer the files to another puter but, eh, who cares the titles stay intact. Other formats that do host metadata will keep it even when transferring the files to another computer. The biggest benefit to dbpoweramp with the full program paid license is that you can rip to multiple formats simultaneously. I ripped to both wav and FLAC files in one process. You can even do ALAC, ogg or mp3 if you like, all during the primary rip. Its up to you to relocate the files by type after the fact, but what a great feature. It will also do batch file conversions. A secret about dbpoweramp is that the 21 day trial of the full program will keep working after the time is up if you do not close out the program and keep it running.
Nothing like owning hard copies. Playing quality rips off your hard drive is even better than playing the CD's soundwise, too.
The last new music I bought was Floyd's The Endless River on vinyl. Now that I'm going to be a seller of my vinyl, finding discogs has also got me interested in buying some vinyl and all the hard to find stuff that I can ever think of is there, CD's included at very nice prices.
I had taken all my CDs and methodically ripped them to ALAC (Apple lossless) but then when I subscribed to iTunes Match there was a lot of hocus pocus going on and I don't trust that my versions are still from my CDs. For instance, their version of "Welcome Back My Friends" by ELP has a studio "Hoedown" in place of the live version, and the tags on the version now in my library show me that it's the Apple replacement of my original. GRRRRRRRR
I'm finding it impossible to be the Apple Fanboy I was twenty years ago. The gimmick used to be that it just worked. Now, there's such chaos to their software that I really can't trust them anymore.
After losing a few things via Apple/iTunes I realize that I didn't own that stuff. I was just being allowed to play it when I wanted - and then it was accidentally taken away.
I'm moving on to CDs again.
Nothing like owning hard copies. Playing quality rips off your hard drive is even better than playing the CD's soundwise, too.
The last new music I bought was Floyd's The Endless River on vinyl. Now that I'm going to be a seller of my vinyl, finding discogs has also got me interested in buying some vinyl and all the hard to find stuff that I can ever think of is there, CD's included at very nice prices.
Location: Really deep in the heart of South California Gender:
Posted:
Sep 1, 2016 - 8:13pm
Steely_D wrote:
After losing a few things via Apple/iTunes I realize that I didn't own that stuff. I was just being allowed to play it when I wanted - and then it was accidentally taken away.
I'm moving on to CDs again. Just got
and pre-ordered this
I'm with you on that. I still like having a hard copy of what I own.
Recently my music purchases are via Google, loaded into my cloud drive, paid for with my checkcard. Does that qualify?
After losing a few things via Apple/iTunes I realize that I didn't own that stuff. I was just being allowed to play it when I wanted - and then it was accidentally taken away.