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Plan B - How much to rip all your CDs to a harddrive?

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    #21
    Thought about this too, lots of oportunuty for 'value add' too.

    Offering the music in a variety of formats (flac, wav, ogg, mp3) you could argue some formats take more time than others to encode so cost more....

    Putting all the CD's in one of those nice carry cases when you hand back

    Options on the Meta Data you are putting on the files.

    Online backup options, (we store your music collection, for you to access online if needed)
    Politicians are wonderfull people, as long as they stay away from things they don't understand, like working for a living!

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      #22
      Originally posted by portseven View Post
      Thought about this too, lots of oportunuty for 'value add' too.

      Offering the music in a variety of formats (flac, wav, ogg, mp3) you could argue some formats take more time than others to encode so cost more....

      Putting all the CD's in one of those nice carry cases when you hand back

      Options on the Meta Data you are putting on the files.

      Online backup options, (we store your music collection, for you to access online if needed)
      Isn't all this illegal? The fact that the licensed material is being converted?

      Just a thought...

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        #23
        Originally posted by zeitghost
        You'll never take me alive, copper.
        Fiscal nomad it's legal.

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          #24
          The only thing I'd pay for would be a highly intelligent renaming and reorganising of the tracks in iTunes. It takes ages to rename all your "Bach, JS", "Bach, J.S." and "Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)" tracks to match your "Bach, Johann Sebastian". And only then do you get to decide whether your 6 Bach cello suites should be organised into 6 albums or 1. Then decide how to use the "Artist" field to differentiate your La Traviata (La Scala 1955) from your La Traviata (Lisbon 1958).

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            #25
            Originally posted by thunderlizard View Post
            The only thing I'd pay for would be a highly intelligent renaming and reorganising of the tracks in iTunes. It takes ages to rename all your "Bach, JS", "Bach, J.S." and "Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)" tracks to match your "Bach, Johann Sebastian". And only then do you get to decide whether your 6 Bach cello suites should be organised into 6 albums or 1. Then decide how to use the "Artist" field to differentiate your La Traviata (La Scala 1955) from your La Traviata (Lisbon 1958).
            Agreed. Organising classical music in iTunes is a friggin nightmare, particularly where you have a load of stuff bought in Europe. There are several different spellings for Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, er I mean Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski, or do I mean Peter Ilyitch Tschaikowsky ???

            The wotsit database that iTunes uses to look up CDs gets confused about which CD you actually have, especially when it comes to European only releases (not just for classical music here, but all genres).-
            Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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              #26
              Originally posted by thunderlizard View Post
              The only thing I'd pay for would be a highly intelligent renaming and reorganising of the tracks in iTunes. It takes ages to rename all your "Bach, JS", "Bach, J.S." and "Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)" tracks to match your "Bach, Johann Sebastian". And only then do you get to decide whether your 6 Bach cello suites should be organised into 6 albums or 1. Then decide how to use the "Artist" field to differentiate your La Traviata (La Scala 1955) from your La Traviata (Lisbon 1958).

              This would be a big advantage for me personally. Since I have nearly a 1000 CDs, categorising them would make my life easier. I really can't be bothered to do it.

              The other thing is, I don't think it's illegal if you get the customer to sign a bit of paper saying it's for backups.

              Also, if I ran this business, I would build up a massive library of songs. Which I could expose through a website as an online juke box. Which is a lovely bonus.

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                #27
                Originally posted by SupremeSpod View Post
                Isn't all this illegal? The fact that the licensed material is being converted?

                Just a thought...
                The Blank media levy in various countries is intended to cover that.*

                Which chucks me off when I only use CDs/DVDs for data backup and boot disks.

                * not sure what the UK position is nowadays but I thought it was always OK for private purposes only.
                Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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                  #28
                  Originally posted by aussielong View Post

                  I'm thinking of some Plan B's and one that I thought of is a simple business.

                  I come to your house and pick up all your CD's. Then I return in a day or two and give you them back plus a hard drive containing all your CD's ripped for you. (Alternatively, I copy the ripped CD's on to your PC, so you don't pay for the hard drive.)

                  How much would you pay for this service, per-CD?
                  You'd have more demand if you also offered that service for videos and even vinyl
                  Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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                    #29
                    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
                    You'd have more demand if you also offered that service for videos and even vinyl
                    I would pay for said service to rip all my DVDs... While its easy and quick enough with CDs it a complete mare with DVDs... Again no idea about the legality...

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