Gentoo Archives: gentoo-user

From: Stroller <stroller@××××××××××××××××××.uk>
To: gentoo-user@l.g.o
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] How do I eject an audio CD inside Gnome?
Date: Mon, 30 May 2011 23:46:01
Message-Id: 0539F4AB-4964-4070-A8CA-F281418BB3FE@stellar.eclipse.co.uk
In Reply to: Re: [gentoo-user] How do I eject an audio CD inside Gnome? by Stroller
1 On 31/5/2011, at 12:26am, Stroller wrote:
2 > On 30/5/2011, at 11:10am, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
3 >
4 >> It gets worse. If you double click on "Audio Disc", it opens a window
5 >> with the "files" uselessly displayed.
6 >
7 > I'll bet it doesn't display the actual files. Audio CDs don't have files, they have a single spiral of wav-like audio data. AIUI Linux desktops *present* audio CDs so that they *appear* as audio files, so that you can more conveniently drag and drop them to your MP3 music collection. Typically there is a preference which allows you to choose between copying them as MP3, AAC, FLAC &c - the audio data will be transcoded to the selected format only after you drag & drop the icons in another folder.
8
9 I meant to say:
10
11 Most people don't find this "icon view" useless, as it allows one to select and play (or copy) a single track at a time. It is a useful "representation" of the songs on the CD. Most people find it *more useful* to be able to drag and drop the tracks to their MP3s folder, because they don't like having to physically find a CD, looking through hundreds of disks, and insert it into the drive. Far easier to drag and drop once, then just search for "fiona apple" in Gnome's file viewer or in their music player.
12
13 TL;DR: you're sounding dangerously like a grumpy old man. In this latter case: it's not necessarily "bad" just because it's unfamiliar to you.
14
15 Stroller.