Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulHarald
Why do you need a log if the files are exactly the same? And I mean EXACTLY the same.
On a Mac, the files appear as .aiff on the CD so you can verify them against the copies on the hard drive. It's like copying a data disc really. Is it not that way on a PC and is that why there's so much fuss about CDs being copied perfectly and not?
Compare it to this: When we discuss copying DVDs, it's all about copying data and verifying with md5 checksum files for 100% perfection. No report, no EAC. What's the difference here?
Appreciate the input,
Wender
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I'm in the middle of a mammoth test of Finder/xACT/EAC and the results are pretty interesting so far.
Here's an example of why you need a log:
From an xACT log:
100% track 5 'Lithium' recorded with minor problems
100% 0 rderr, 0 skip, 12 atom, 0 edge, 0 drop, 0 dup, 0 drift
100% 324 overlap(0.5 .. 0.5)
The same track extracted by dragging from the Finder (OS X 10.3.9) produced an identical file but in EAC produced "suspicious positions". Without the log there would be no indicator of any problems...even things that are nigh on inextractable with EAC and produce what xACT describes as audible errors/major problems will copy across from Finder as quickly as normal. Unless you listen to everything you extract you would be unaware and could pass on unlistenably flawed tracks.
I'll have the results of my tests later today.
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