In the previous installments of Command Line Basics: Ripping Audio CD’s, I’ve gone through ripping CD’s and saving the files as WAV files, transcoding those files to Ogg Vorbis audio, and finally, querying an online CD database tagging those Ogg files. I the last installment, I promised to show a more automated way to do …
Continue reading Command Line Basics: Ripping Audio CD’s, Part 4linux
In part 1 of CLB: Ripping Audio CD’s, I showed how to rip the songs from your CD and save them as WAV files. In part 2 I showed how to convert those files to Ogg Vorbis audio. Today in Part 3 I’m going to show a few ways to tag those Ogg Vorbis audio …
Continue reading Command Line Basics: Ripping Audio CD’s, Part 3In Part 1 of CLB: Ripping Audio CD’s, I showed how to rip the audio from a CD and save it as WAV files using cdparanoia. In today’s short tutorial I’ll show how to convert those WAV files to Ogg Vorbis audio files. So the first thing we’ll need to do is make sure that …
Continue reading Command Line Basics: Ripping Audio CD’s, Part 2There are many GUI based CD rippers available for the Linux desktop. While many of these applications do a great job of ripping, I like to understand the underlying technology. For that reason, I decided to figure out how to rip CD’s from the command line.
Continue reading Command Line Basics: Ripping Audio CD’s, Part 1If you regularly follow my blog you know that I recently got an HTC Droid Incredible smartphone. This phone has a native screen resolution of 480×320 pixels. MPEG4 video with AAC audio is supported in both the .mp4 and .3gp container formats.
Continue reading Transcode Video For The HTC Incredible on Linux