Yes, for hours. The problem is that many, many people use the term "track" and "index" interchangeably when talking about audio CD's, and this has made the search process incredibly frustrating. I've tried searching on "sub-index" as well (even though that's technically not what they are called), but I haven't been able to come up with anything. As I understand it, indices are really just timeline-based mappings that exist in the disk's menu table, as opposed to tracks, which exist as actual physical boundaries in the disk format. Maybe what I'm looking for doesn't actually exist yet, but I figure if anyone has solved this problem it's going to be a linux audiophile. Anybody have ideas on where else to look/ask?? --- Garett Shulman <shulmang@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Have you tried googleing? > > http://www.cdda2wav.de/ > > doublehelixer@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > > >I am desperate to solve this problem. Can anyone > help > >me find the software I need? Please please? > > > >- Andy > > > >--- "doublehelixer@xxxxxxxxx" > ><doublehelixer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > >>Hello all, > >> > >>I'm having trouble finding an audio utility for > >>linux > >>which can rip individual files using indices on > the > >>CD's not just tracks. I have a large library of > >>audio > >>CD's I need to rip, and they all use indices as > they > >>all have more than 99 tracks. Can anybody > recommend > >>a > >>tool that can handle these? > >> > >>Thanks in advance, > >> > >>- Andy > >> > >> > > > > > > > > > >__________________________________ > >Yahoo! FareChase: Search multiple travel sites in > one click. > >http://farechase.yahoo.com > > > > > > __________________________________ Yahoo! FareChase: Search multiple travel sites in one click. http://farechase.yahoo.com