1. µTorrent is a good choice. There are more though. You can burn dvd bootlegs (Video_ts folders) with ImgBurn (freeware). Also many more possibilities
  2. Originally posted by Risto:[..]

    µTorrent is a good choice. There are more though. You can burn dvd bootlegs (Video_ts folders) with ImgBurn (freeware). Also many more possibilities


    Thanks Chris, will try these out tomorrow
  3. i'm now useing utorrent but its downloading very slow, i checked the downlad speed and it say something about port forwardeding not running properly
  4. anybody got any tips for burning an mkv file to DVD?
  5. Hey, does anyone know what the sampling frequency of CDs are?
    48 kHz or 44.1 kHz ? I know mp3s are 44.1 kHz but aren't sure what CDs are

    I just discovered that my ps3 was setto output everything at 48 kHz (even 44.1 kHz content) and now that i've changed it to output at 44.1 kHz my mp3s sound much better. Before I could always hear a drastic difference between mp3s and CDs, not any more
  6. 44.1 kHz.
  7. Jep, although mp3s can be 48khz.


  8. But CDs?

    I know you can get MP3s at 48kHz but why would you want to - the idea has never appealed to me to get a higher-quality audioform. Just go for WAV or FLAC. I'd prefer going for DVD audio at 48 kHz and leaving MP3s at 44.1 kHz as I download or rip them at.
  9. AudioCDs are always 44100Hz and 16bits PCM audio.

    DVD audio (48khz pcm) can be ripped as 48khz mp3's although most encoders are not optimized for it.
  10. Originally posted by Risto:AudioCDs are always 44100Hz and 16bits PCM audio.

    DVD audio (48khz pcm) can be ripped as 48khz mp3's although most encoders are not optimized for it.


    That's what you might know - can Foobar rip at 48 kHz and the new iPods (presumably) play them without skipping?