On Mon, May 03, 2004 at 09:33:34PM -0500, Reuben Martin wrote:
Just those in the TOC of a CD. If I got that
right, I have to
just make
track1.wav, track2.wav, etc and then run cdrecord on all of
them to put
them onto a CD. (I'll ask in this list if that fails :)
Like mik mentioned, you will probably want to used GCDMaster for creating the CD tracks.
It supports features like allowing you to set track and indexing points without having to
chop up the file into multiple files first. The real benifit from this is if you happen to
be doing a live cd. GCDMaster uses a 74 frame/sec time code like CDs do. That allows you
to set a track right on a frame so that you don't have padded tracks, or worse loud
popping noises between tracks. Even if you're not doing a live CD, it's still very
handy for audio CDs.
gcdmaster is useful for what I do. I have a 54 minute session of an afternoon
thunderstorm recorded made up of 11 individual tracks. I smashed them all
together using Audacity leaving me with a 564 MB file. Burning a 54
minute session with only one track prevents searching for content.
gcdmaster allows me to insert track marks with no pregaps in appropriate places that serve
as adequate placeholders for searching.
--
Jack Bowling
mailto: jbinpg(a)shaw.ca