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Ceate multiple tracks from single MP3 files
And by copying the full-length file, you're using FOURTEEN times as much disk space (given the thirteen tracks the original poster specified). Setting the start/end times doesn't affect the size of the file; it just causes the playback to start at the specified point rather than the beginning, and causes it to end after the specified duration. (If it did truncate the file, you'd have to re-rip it to move the start earlier or the end later, right?) And any time savings you're getting from only ripping the disc once is overwhelmed by the amount of time you spend playing the files, fiddling with the start/end times. The previous poster is right; it's better to just rip the disc twice, once all joined together and once as individual tracks (or smaller joined pieces). I've done that with a different Floyd disc, Dark Side of the Moon...
Ceate multiple tracks from single MP3 files
questor... I think it may be you who missed the point of the original hint. When you save the file from Quicktime Pro, it is actually just saving a small QuickTime .mov file (a few Kbytes) that references the original, full-length rip (still in MP3). You're making 14 copies of this small file, and setting the start/stop times on each of them. So in actuality it does save a lot of disk space. |
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