So, I see I am not alone in being hung up on offset correction...
Why shouldn't this "insignificant" option be available in this magnificent piece of software that is MC 15? I would guess that many clever features have been added over the years that are used by fewer people than this would be - my point being that a feature which is pointless to one person, might be priceless to another. I would still like to know if it is because it's hard to implement technically, or if it is for some other political or philosophical reason. And if nobody wants to answer, I will still be a happy user of MC and
maybe make it my default ripper as well.
First run: Checksum A&B
Second Run: Checksum A&C
Third Run: Checksum B&D
I have also experienced this a couple of times.
Regarding PlexTools, since some of you guys seem to have experience with it: I did some testing once, and I believe I found that ripping an album with PlexTools to separate tracks, then burning those tracks to a CD, gave me a new CD that had the correct pre-gaps and everything (when using EAC to compare the original with the copy) - without me using cue sheets. Can this be? If so, I wonder how. Does PlexTools store information internally after a rip? Or if this is nonsense, please tell me so, and I'll write the memory off as a weird dream. Thanks.
Von