Is it possible to store (at least) two versions of one song in iTunes (one lossless, the other one in a format you are comfortable with listening to on your iPod) without recording it twice and having two distinct entries?
You can get a program called iTunes Library Manager from Doug's Applescripts for iTunes site:
You can use it to have separate Lossless and Lossy collections, or segregate your christmas songs etc.
You can rip the files to lossless then once you've done a batch of CDs convert them to AAC (menu option: Advanced -> Convert Selection to ...) and import the files into the other library and delete them from the lossless one.
Wow, all this because I dared to suggest that CDs were not the pinnacle of quality...
But that's not all the you did. You suggested the above along with a lot of very debatable stuff about why CDs aren't the "pinnacle", and why LPs are better. A whole lot of arguing about audio issues would go away if people didn't so often feel the need to accompany their opinions with bogus technical explanations for those opinions.
Comments
Originally posted by RolandG
I have one simple question/suggestion:
Is it possible to store (at least) two versions of one song in iTunes (one lossless, the other one in a format you are comfortable with listening to on your iPod) without recording it twice and having two distinct entries?
You can get a program called iTunes Library Manager from Doug's Applescripts for iTunes site:
http://www.malcolmadams.com/itunes/i...arymanager.php
You can use it to have separate Lossless and Lossy collections, or segregate your christmas songs etc.
You can rip the files to lossless then once you've done a batch of CDs convert them to AAC (menu option: Advanced -> Convert Selection to ...) and import the files into the other library and delete them from the lossless one.
Originally posted by TWinbrook46636
Wow, all this because I dared to suggest that CDs were not the pinnacle of quality...
But that's not all the you did. You suggested the above along with a lot of very debatable stuff about why CDs aren't the "pinnacle", and why LPs are better. A whole lot of arguing about audio issues would go away if people didn't so often feel the need to accompany their opinions with bogus technical explanations for those opinions.