Sorry about taking so long to reply.
Some follow up questions:
a) Going on aoqw76's comments, it sounds like you'd use MC in Windows mode to rip CDs and perhaps tag them etc, and your Linux side will still 'see' everything okay?
the database that MC creates is unique to MC, but the information is just collected from meta data in the files.
So any media player will work, you can switch to itunes or media monkey or whatever - they will just create their own database anyway.
You can if you wish purchase dbpoweramp for CD ripping, but in my opinion there is little benefit of that over MC's own ripping. It works perfectly.
b) Any time frame for when CD ripping in Linux will be possible? I'm not sure which OS I'd like to house my main ripping/storage activities...but I was hoping Linux could handle it, as I'm not a huge fan of MS' business practices.
c) Since MC is proprietary software, I'm just wondering how that affects any future decisions to use other music organiser software. I.e. would you be required to re-rip everything again and re-do the tagging? E.g. if for some reason I wanted to use Apple's music organiser, iTunes, could that 'see' my PC rips and tags and still play them at the highest possible quality you can get on PC? Or if I used a Linux media player, could that access the MC catalogue on PC?
d) A couple of questions on ripping and organising album tracks etc...
i) Say you've ripped an album and have it on your storage device...once it's there, can you remove pops and clicks in individual tracks at a later point? I.e. I've got quite a large collection of CDs and don't want to re-listen to them again for that specific purpose...but once I listen to them again, it would be good if I could remove such artefacts.
Pops and clicks are a very rare problem unless the CD is damaged. They could be edited after ripping.
ii) I'd like to be able to re-order album tracks to reflect the original release. E.g. The Beatles often had their albums released in the US with a different track order or different track listing. I'd like to be able to have the original track listing, with perhaps "bonus" tracks or whatever tacked onto the end. Possible?
Yes you can reorder the tracks to your preferred configuration, just swap track 1 with track 2 or whatever order you prefer.
Haven't really explored other options too much, but I have heard good things about VLC (not sure how much of an audio option that is) as well as UMPlayer, which a Linux magazine recommended.
...oh, I was lookig at an article in a hi-fi magazine on this topic. The writer said that they used Audacious to play audio and VLC to play AV files and that they used Audacity when necessary...haven't really looked into Audacious and Audacity...but since this came from a hi-fi magazine, it would carry some weight, right?
It also mentioned dbpoweramp. If that's a paid product, any reason to pay for that over just using your PC to rip CDs?
Lastly, on recording resolution...there'd be no reason to rip it a resolution beyond the source CD, right? Think I saw two different figures as to what that actually is...would MC tell you so you can match it when you rip the CD?
Thanks.
P.S. tried to edit "MC" to read "MC" without much luck, in either "Modify" mode (where I hit "save") or with the pencil/pad diagram option either. How do to you edit? Or does it take time to go through? Well, that "P.S." went through all right! But not the...hang on, the site dropped the "JR" bit from "P.S." bit re edits! What's going on?