I would love the ability to record them so I don't always have to pull them out to play them. Or listen to them in the car or going mobile. No vinyl fan can deny digital has very clear advantages . MC can rip virtually anything digital. Recording vinyl can be easily automated, split into tracks automatically, apply a high pass filter and possibly even remove ticks and pops.
I've seen the request made before on the forums, but I also believe there is a potential for new users out there. Many use Audacity to manually record, amplify, filter, split and tag. There is no single integrated solution. MC could be the first to do it properly.
This was a great idea floated a few weeks ago in the Trends thread.
A feature like this could be of significant interest to a lot of current users. In addition, the feature would probably pay for itself quickly if the word got around the audiophile community that JRiver was the best and easiest way to make digital archives of your vinyl LP's. You guys would be the only "Secure Vinyl Ripper" in town!
I think for this to work you would need the following steps to the process, from IM's list above plus a few more:
-High quality audio path from soundcard to ripping engine
-Automated setting of recording levels (this is tricky)
-Full array of encoding options (wav flac mp3 etc)
-Access to DSP (to apply RIAA curve if necessary)
-Potential pops and click removal, plus other filters
-Automatic division into tracks (very important!)
-Metadata editing
Actually, combined with the Windows audio driver this could also open up JRiver as a digital Phono Preamp as well. Instead of buying three different phono preamps at huge cost, audiophiles could just have three different RIAA curve implementations in JRiver. PSAudio is having some success right now in this arena of digital/analog hybrid hardware, for example.
Thanks for considering this idea. I think there are a lot of big projects going on behind the scenes right now at JRiver, but this might dovetail nicely with the WDM driver plans.