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Old May 8, 2011, 11:37 AM
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ebduhamel ebduhamel is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: San Diego, CA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainCommando View Post
the money spent on the disc when it was brand new went to the publisher and composer rather than a pirate.
Always a good feature!

From what LiquidAcid said, I will never hear an increase in the quality of the music in any way similar to the differences in mp3 encoding, because the actual data encoded on the CD is the same no matter how well or how poorly it was recorded. What I can still hope for is less skipping or audio dropout. What happens to me the most is a CD that is not visibly damaged will, on some players, skip at the same points during certain songs. On one of my players, instead of skipping I get moments where the sound completely stops for a gap. This must be happen when an error in the data is not corrected in time to play the sound?

As for dyes, CaptainCommando, I had heard about that in the printing process of certain CDs, but is this how both CD-Rs AND original manufactured CDs are made? I thought the process for making each type was fundamentally different.
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