My sister Matilda will never get cured from her addiction -- CD ripping. After damaging my
Samsung portable laptop with her annoying library of MP3 files, she's now using my newly-bought laptop as her musical editor. You could've knock me on a loop, but I'm not kidding. My sister recently installed a software that will enable music lovers (my sister's obsessed though) to convert their CDs into MP3 files without sending their CDs to a ripping company.
I am sitting in the sofa reading a Maeve Binchy masterpiece while my sister murders my laptop. I don't mind the angry rants of the singer about her boyfriend, because my brain processes music in the same way it processes informercials. Smart CD Ripper, according to my sister who is now creating a Madonna MP3 library, has a wide range of features that supports WAV, OGG, and MP3 file types. It also allows users to get information about the album they are ripping through FreeDB, a song info source in the web. The software also has a
CD player in the package so the user can make sure that he/she is ripping the accurate songs before saving them to their MP3 players. I don't care how much the software is. But she'll be shelling out dollars if she destroys my laptop.