by panf » Wed Mar 06, 2019 5:49 am
I understand this. The source is not damaged, but I guess the pc made mistakes while ripping (performance problems in a split second?). But since I hear the mp3s while driving, I cannot take notes, but get annoyed if such damage ruins the atmosphere of a track.
The thing I would like to know, what this really short damage in mp3s is called and if there is a software that can at least identify those tracks, in order to do something about it and work on them. If a software could put in a blank for this short sequence would already help.
I understand this. The source is not damaged, but I guess the pc made mistakes while ripping (performance problems in a split second?). But since I hear the mp3s while driving, I cannot take notes, but get annoyed if such damage ruins the atmosphere of a track.
The thing I would like to know, what this really [b]short damage in mp3s is called[/b] and if there is a software that can at least identify those tracks, in order to do something about it and work on them. If a software could put in a blank for this short sequence would already help.