Re: SOLVED via WORKAROUND - What is the best CD ripper for Kubuntu? EAC in WindowsXP
Well... taking it a bit further from the title of the thread, but as long as it is somewhat related and useful information ....
If your audio board is capable of maximum 48KHz, then this is what you should record at. Anything above that only adds unneeded stress on your system.
When you later work on the file, I would stay at 48KHz - your playout is locked to this, even if you up-sample it to 96KHz and upsampling do not add any extra to the audio (except maybe som noise...). Precision wise, you would normally work in 32-bit float.
Also, on board sound is rarely a good way of recording. It usually have WAY too much noise, so if you do any kind of serious audio recordings, you should think about getting a good audio board that has Linux drivers.
I fully understand your doubts about adding another sound board to your Linux installation. I am a bit worried about this myself. At the moment, audio in Kubuntu seems to be a bit of a mess. To be able to control it properly, you have to be the "Yoda of CLI". We really need good audio settings per program. And the best I have seen so far (I am only talking about the clarity of the audio settings here) is Traverso DAW - http://traverso-daw.org/ . So simple, so easy.
Well... taking it a bit further from the title of the thread, but as long as it is somewhat related and useful information ....
If your audio board is capable of maximum 48KHz, then this is what you should record at. Anything above that only adds unneeded stress on your system.
When you later work on the file, I would stay at 48KHz - your playout is locked to this, even if you up-sample it to 96KHz and upsampling do not add any extra to the audio (except maybe som noise...). Precision wise, you would normally work in 32-bit float.
Also, on board sound is rarely a good way of recording. It usually have WAY too much noise, so if you do any kind of serious audio recordings, you should think about getting a good audio board that has Linux drivers.
I fully understand your doubts about adding another sound board to your Linux installation. I am a bit worried about this myself. At the moment, audio in Kubuntu seems to be a bit of a mess. To be able to control it properly, you have to be the "Yoda of CLI". We really need good audio settings per program. And the best I have seen so far (I am only talking about the clarity of the audio settings here) is Traverso DAW - http://traverso-daw.org/ . So simple, so easy.
Comment