Leave error correction on, it is more secure. Freeware like Foobar or MusicBee can do the ripping as well. The advantage is that they do support AccurateRip. Basically you compare your rip with those of others. The Well-Tempered Computer. Vincent Kars , Oct 5, Location: North of San Francisco in Seattle. Have around , tracks almost 3 TB on external HDs - and backups. If I notice a glitch during a later playback, then I reload. That simple. I don't do flac files but I get those hi rez folks who prefer that.
Lossless via iTunes works perfectly for me. Mazzy , Oct 5, Dan Steele , Freebird , thxphotog and 8 others like this.
Location: Katy, TX. EAC was just too overwhelming, but if there is an up to date guide to setting it up properly I would be willing to try it again. I just remember it being very complicated, and I never knew what half the options even done.
I don't want to second guess this, just want to find a method that works, and works properly. All the EAC guides I could find seem to be a few versions out of date, so half the options aren't listed there. Location: Southern California. Apple Lossless Encoder: Use if you want to listen to imported songs on audiophile-quality sound systems without losing audio quality. Choose a bit rate from the Setting pop-up menu not available with Apple Lossless Encoder.
In most cases, the default selection works well. If you chose MP3 Encoder, you can choose one of the following:. Good Quality: Choose to fit more songs on a portable MP3 player with limited storage capacity. High Quality: Choose if you play music in a noisy environment. This setting creates files that are about 1 MB in size per minute of music. Higher Quality: Choose if you plan to create your own audio CDs or listen to your music with high-quality stereo speakers.
Set custom settings for greater control over the quality and size of imported files when importing using AAC Encoder encoding format. Stereo Bit Rate: The higher the Mono or Stereo kilobits per second kbps , the higher the audio quality and the larger the file size.
The most common bit rate for stereo MP3 files is between kbps and kbps. If you still have trouble importing songs, visit the iTunes Support website. If you hear popping or clicking noises when you play songs imported from a CD, your disc drive may not have read the CD correctly. Try turning on error correction and then importing those songs again. To learn how to add other content to iTunes, see How to add items. Import songs from CDs into your iTunes library iTunes imports most songs in a few minutes, and an entire CD in about 10 minutes.
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