Date: Wed, 16 Jul 2014 20:37:44 +0200 From: Matthias Apitz <guru@unixarea.de> To: freebsd-multimedia@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ripping audio CD to mp3 gives silent file Message-ID: <20140716183744.GA1521@La-Habana> In-Reply-To: <20140716182329.GJ45513@funkthat.com> References: <20140716064056.GB1520@La-Habana> <20140716150058.3bbbbad5@X220.alogt.com> <20140716073845.GA1731@La-Habana> <20140716184329.N50382@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20140716093246.GA2083@La-Habana> <20140716182329.GJ45513@funkthat.com>
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El día Wednesday, July 16, 2014 a las 11:23:29AM -0700, John-Mark Gurney escribió: > > > > write first the .wav file, test it and convert it then to mp3. > > > > > > > Thanks for this hint. Already the .wav file is silent, also in a > > > > Windows media player the created .wav file is silent. > > > > > > Well, lame gave a faithful rendering, then :) > > > > Yes, and how do I solve the problem that the .wav file is silent > > already? > > Have you played the .wav file on another machine than the FreeBSD > machine? As I wrote above: I tested the *.wav file with the Win7 Media Player. > How did you determine that the .wav file is slient? I tried to play it with mplayer: mplayer shows progress, but no sound. Then I played with the same mplayer on the same system some older mp3 file with the same headphone: worked fine. After ripping the CD on some other FreeBSD system, I copied the file to the VM and used the same mplayer again: worked now as it should. matthias -- Matthias Apitz | /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign: E-mail: guru@unixarea.de | \ / - No HTML/RTF in E-mail WWW: http://www.unixarea.de/ | X - No proprietary attachments phone: +49-170-4527211 | / \ - Respect for open standards | en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII_Ribbon_Campaign
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