Grip (software)

The software is rather similar to Audiograbber on Windows - without sound card capture feature; it is fast, lightweight, and easy to compile.

Grip
Grip 3.2
Developer(s)Grip developers
Stable release
4.2.0 / July 14, 2020 (2020-07-14)
Repository
Written inC
Operating systemLinux, Unix-like
TypeCD ripper
LicenseGNU General Public License
Websitesourceforge.net/projects/grip/

Grip is a free Compact Disc player and CD ripper.

Grip uses a selection of encoders, including cdparanoia.

History

The original author, Mike Oliphant, originally registered Grip as a project at SourceForge.net, the free and open-source software website, on March 17, 2000, and made pre-compiled binaries for RPM Linux distributions available. However, by mid-2005 development had stalled, and while the software was still very much usable, in effect it languished without a maintainer. In late 2016, a new maintainer, Johnny Solbu, stepped up by forking the project into "Grip 2" based on version 3.3.1 of the original. In April 2017, he gained access to the original project page and stated on the forked project page his intention on moving development back to the old project,[1] and released v3.3.5. As of February 26, 2018, the current released version is 3.6.3. Development seems to be on-going and the current release works well.

Features

  • Full-featured CD player with a small screen footprint in "condensed" mode
  • Database lookup/submission to share track information over the net
  • HTTP proxy support for those behind firewalls
  • Loop, shuffle, and playlist modes
  • Ripping of single, multiple, or partial tracks
  • Encoding of ripped .wav files into Ogg Vorbis, MP3 or FLAC files.
  • Simultaneous rip and encode
  • Support for multiple encode processes on SMP machines
  • Adding ID3v1/v2 tags to MP3 files after encoded
  • Cooperating with DigitalDJ, a MySQL-based MP3 jukebox
gollark: They also don't work half the time because of night.
gollark: Or they fell off when installing it.
gollark: Semihyperunironically, nuclear waste is not actually very big volumetrically, so you could plausibly just stick it in the ground forever as we already do.
gollark: We should just dump it diffusely in the ocean; nobody will notice.
gollark: Sound would still propagate through the ground.

See also

References

  1. "Grip2". SourceForge. Retrieved 2017-04-14. We have now accuired [sic] access to the old grip project here on SF. Coding will therefore move back to the original project page
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