4 minutes to rip a CD doesn't seem right. Could you double check your settings?
I checked them immediately before the test, and again just now. MC's speed was on the maximum setting. The CD in question is a longer cd (7 tracks, but about 60 minutes of music)
"Same compression level"... did you change MC's defaults?
MC and dBPoweramp use a different default compression setting for FLAC, so I had to equalize them somehow, as the time to compress is potentially meaningful. I set them both to use maximum compression.
Thanks for the data.
My pleasure, let me know if you want more, I can add a few more.
Why would you want "Ratings"? I don't think I'd want "Genre" either.
I chose the metadata tags that are meaningful to me; there are other tags that other people might care about that I could have also evaluated (styles, composer, contributing artist, etc.). To be clear, dBpoweramp had data for a few other tags that were also missing in JRiver, but I omitted them because I don't personally care about them.
I like to have ratings for the same reason that I read music reviews. I ingest a lot of music, and I find it helpful to have guideposts before I re-do the ratings myself. What may not be immediately clear is that (mostly) dBpoweramp grabs ratings from AllMusic. Before I ever picked up dBpoweramp, I used to read allmusic for music reviews and ratings because their coverage is unparalleled. Most of the ratings go through their editorial process (like their music reviews), so the ratings represent an actual critical opinion, not just crowd-sourced noise. For example, when I've been looking into a new artist with a large catalog, it's hard to know where to start, but the AllMusic "Editor's Choice" album for that artist has typically been a safe starting point everytime I've tried it, etc. So I like to see the ratings from AllMusic because it tells me at a glance which tracks are likely to be the "hits" and which ones are likely to be troubled. It doesn't track my taste perfectly (how could it?), but it's very helpful to me as a consumer of music.
As for Genre, genre is notoriously slippery. I used to make myself crazy trying to fit everything into a very specific slot. JRiver actually cured me of that type of thinking. When I was a record store clerk, and when I worked in radio, music needed a clear and categorical genre because it needed to be physically located in one specific place. With digital files that can be tagged, the "exclusivity" of genre isn't really necessary anymore. You can create a hierarchy of genre and sub-genre, or you can treat the Genre tag as a list of tags, and albums can have five genres if you want, which can help play doctor make useful connections. So the metadata-genre saves me typing, and if I decide the work needs a more specific genre, I can add a second one as an additional datapoint. It's rare (IME) that the genre tags from the metadata are flat wrong; they're often simply too vague, but in a multi-genre world that's just more grist for the mill.