Red Hat Linux Fedora For Dummies [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Red Hat Linux Fedora For Dummies [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Jon Hall

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Ripping CDs


Are you paranoid? If not, do you want to be? Well, cdparanoia can help fulfill all your fears. Just kidding. Really, cdparanoia is used for ripping the audio information — music files — from CDs to your hard drive or to other CDs. Ripping refers to the process of copying audio from a CD to your computer.

The following steps show how to use the GNOME RIP (Grip) interface to simplify using cdparanoia to copy music from a CD to your hard drive:



Insert your favorite CD in the drive, click the GNOME Menu button, and choose Sound & VideoMore Sound & Video Applications.

The Grip window opens, as shown in Figure 11-3.



Click the Rip column (on the right side of screen) of each track you want to use.

A check mark appears next to each track you select.



Select the Rip tab at the top of the window (next to the Tracks tab).



Click the Rip Only button.


Figure 11-3: The Grip window shows a CD’s tracks.



Grip opens the cdparanoia program and feeds it the options you just chose. The music is stored in Ogg, the up-and-coming open source protocol. Grip creates by default the ogg directory in your home directory (assuming that you haven’t changed the defaults). Grip creates a subdirectory (in ogg) named after each CD you record. Individual tracks are stored in files named after each song; those files live in the directory named after the CD.

After you create the music file, you can listen to it with XMMS or GNOME-CD.

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