New window. Continuation.
So MC15 is doing a great job of ripping and converting to FLAC. However, when I try to send the FLAC files to iTunes and my iPad, which it recognized, they never arrive, probably because iTunes doesn't know about FLAC. So even if the quality of ripping of MC15 and EAC is equal, one of them (EAC) compresses directly to m4a, which sounds as good as FLAC and can be sent to iTunes and my iPad, and the other (MC15) doesn't.
One solution would be to use DLNA for everything, which is what you keep suggesting. DLNA is great, works well, gives me access to MC. But I don't want to keep a media server running continuously (see above). So MC15 is not doing exactly what I wanted, which is to save ripped files directly as m4a or ALAC. So EAC is more useful to me for ripping because it is less work. Furthermore, EAC is doing a much better job of finding the cover art in the internet than MC15. MC15 would immediately become more useful if there were a simple way to compress to m4a or alac format using an external program. But you wrote that your skills are not a good match for these needs. So what I will do is keep playing with the combination EAC for ripping, MC15 for storage and DLNA. I will also test whether I can transfer directly from MC15 to iTunes and my iPad once I have some more m4a files in MC15. If this works well for me, I will buy the full version of MC15 in the next few days and am still toying with the idea of buying your ID. But life would be a lot simpler if you supported an external converter that saved data as m4a format.
Thanks
Mark