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Christopher Negus

"Linux Bible, 2008 Edition: Boot up to Ubuntu, Fedora, KNOPPIX, Debian, openSUSE, and 11 Other Distributions"


3. Click the Config tab at the top of the page, and then select Encode.
4. You can choose the type of encoder used to compress the music by clicking the Encoder
box and selecting an encoder (by default, oggenc compresses files in Ogg Vorbis, assuming
that Ogg Vorbis was installed on your Linux distribution).
5. Click the Rip tab at the top of the page.
6. Click one of the following:
 Rip+Encode??”This rips the selected songs and (if you left in the default oggenc compression
in Step 4) compresses them in Ogg Vorbis format. You need an Ogg Vorbis
player to play the songs after they have been ripped in this format (there are many
Ogg Vorbis players for Linux).
 Rip only??”This rips the selected songs in WAV format. You can use a standard CD
player to play these songs. (When I tried this, the same song ripped in WAV was 12
times larger than the Ogg Vorbis file.)
Songs are copied to the hard disk in the format you selected. By default, the files are
copied into a subdirectory of $HOME/ogg (such as /home/jake/ogg). The subdirectory
is named for the artist and CD. For example, if the user jake were ripping the song
called ???High Life??? by the artist Mumbo, the directory containing ripped songs would be
/home/jake/ogg/mumbo/high_life. Each song file is named for the song (for example,
fly_fly_fly.


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