"Grip" was the standard GUI one on the unix/linux side for a long time.
I'm sure there's a plethora of them now. It had some options to spawn
extra encoders to munch on multiple extracted tracks at once. Back in the
era of 500MHz cpu's you could even kluge up some scripts with it to farm
out encoding jobs to other hosts via rsh/ssh. Any more CPU's are fast
enough that they can encode music as fast as your cd drive will pull the
raw .wav off the media. It supports access to freedb.org to generate id3
tags.
On Tue, 13 May 2008, Eben King wrote:
> What's a good CD -> mp3 ripper? By "good" I mean "will query {cd,free}db to
> set the tags and name the file appropriately". Bonus if it's multithreaded
> to take advantage of the two CPU cores. I've been doing it manually, which
> is OK for a single CD but impractical for 250. I wrote a script to do it way
> back when, but the user supplied the names, not a web site. And probably
> buggy. And didn't take advantage of parallelism inherent in the hardware
> either.
>
> --
> -eben QebWenE01R@vTerYizUonI.nOetP royalty.mine.nu:81
>
> An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of
> being called an idea at all. -Oscar Wilde
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