Supporting Products
Here follows an incomplete listing of programs that supports or uses
BladeEnc
for mp3 compression.
We used to have a much nicer listing with screenshots and everything,
but that
simply took too much time and effort to keep up to date. Hopefully
this shall
stay a bit more current.
If you find some errors or would like to add some products, please
send an e-mail.
Windows Frontends for BladeEnc.exe
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AutoBlade by Nick Ryan is a frontend that supports Batch encoding and Drag'n
Drop and can power down your computer after encoding.
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BEShell by XeT Software
was the first frontend written for BladeEnc. It supports Batch encoding
and Drag'n Drop like most other frontends.
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BFree
by Peter Ogden is a nice looking frontend with Batch encoding and built
in ID3 tagging. However, it lacks Drag'n Drop support so you need to choose
your files through the fileselector.
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BladeBatch is
a very sophisticated and feature filled frontend by Eugene Loginov with
loads of features. It totally hides away BladeEnc and provides its own
progress indicator, making it look and feel more like an encoder on its
own than just a frontend. Supports everything like Batch Encoding
(where you even can edit the batch while encoding!), Drag'n Drop, power
down after encoding etc.
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BladeEnc Helper
by Shawn Andersson is another good frontend. It has all the usual features
like Batch Encoding and Drag'n Drop and as an original feature it can do
an recursive search of directories for audio files to encode.
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DistributeEnc
is a frontend by Klaasjan te Voortwis which is meant for distributed encoding
over a network using a server/client model. It distributes the different
files from the batch to all the clients it can find and thus lets you encode
multiple files quickly without setting up a number of computers individually.
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FrontBlade by SoftechSoftware
is a feature filled frontend with a lot of features. Batch Encoding, Drag'n
Drop, Shutdown computer after encoding and ID3 tagging. It can both hide
away BladeEnc (like BladeBatch) or run BladeEnc openly.
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RazorBlade
is a feature filled frontend by Holger Dors that (like BladeBatch) hides
away BladeEnc and provides its own progress indicator etc. It has loads
of features like Batch Encoding, Drag'n Drop, Shutdown computer after encoding,
Minimize to tray and can do an automatic online check for new versions.
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Twilight by Night DreamZz is a small and easy to use frontend. It has deliberately
a minimal selection of options as to not confuse the user and supports
Batch Encoding.
- Distributed MP3
by Bhanu Mittal is a Java based frontend for Windows that does distributed mp3 encoding.
Windows Frontends for BladeEnc.dll
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Mp3NetEnc
is a frontend by ZoombyWoof that both works as a normal one-machine frontend and can
handle distributed encoding of batches over multiple machines running Mp3NetEnc.
Windows CD Rippers that supports BladeEnc.exe
and/or BladeEnc.dll
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Audiograbber by Jackie
is one of the most popular CD Rippers for Windows. Commercial product that
requires registration.
-
CD-Copy by Markus Barth is mainly a
CD-Ripper but is extremely feature filled and includes everything you need
for ripping, encoding, naming tracks, ID3 tagging, print sleeves and cut
your own CDs. The sheer number of features and slightly confusing layout
might make it a bit hard to get used to though. Commercial product that
requires registration.
-
CDex is a completely free, Open Source
encoder by Albert Faber. It has its own built in mp3 encoder, but also
supports BladeEnc.
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Easy CD-DA Extractor 3 is
a good and feature filled CD Ripper by Jukka Poikolainen who originally
wrote the BladeEnc DLL-wrapper. Commercial product that requires registration.
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Exact Audio Copy (EAC) by Andre
Wiethoff is a freeware CD Ripper that should be THE CHOICE if
you take quality seriously. It has special algorithms for making sure that
no jitter, skips or other errors gets through and if it can't be avoided,
it does its best to hide them and reports any suspicious song positions.
The drawback of this is that it has to read each sector at least twice
and sometimes much more if it's a badly scratch record making the ripping
process anything from between twice as slow (normal) to taking hours (very
uncommon).
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CD 'n' Go! is a freeware CD Ripper
by Jose Mejuto. Supports most important things like CDDB and ID3, but I
dont' know so much more about it.
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AKRip by
Andy Key is a free, Open Source (GPL) commandline based CD Ripper that
just like BladeEnc doesn't have any graphical interface, but can be run
from the DOS-Prompt or batch scripts. Comes with complete source code.
-
CD-DAX-Tractor
is also by Andy Key and the GUI counterpart of AKRip. It's completely
free, Open Source (GPL).
Windows Audio Editors and Music Tools
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WavePurity by SensoLogic GmbH is
an Audio Restauration Software Package that uses BladeEnc for mp3 encoding.
Linux/UNIX Graphical Frontends
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Krabber by Adrian Schroeter
is a GPL'ed, KDE based graphical frontend for CD Paranoia and BladeEnc
(can also use other encoders).
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KBlade by Arnaud
Rolly is a GPL'ed, KDE based graphical frontend for BladeEnc. Nice and
straight forward and supports Drag'n Drop.
-
Grip by Mike Oliphant is a
GPL'ed, GTK based CD-Ripper, player and encoder. It has the functionality
of CD Paranoia and LAME built in, but can also use external rippers and
encoders, including BladeEnc. Lot of features and stuff like CDDB support,
ID3 tagging etc.
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DAC2MP3 by Fredrik H Spång
and Tom Olav Urstad is a GPL'ed frontend for cdparanoia and BladeEnc (can
also use other encoders) written in Tcl/Tk.
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grip.e by Stephen Balukoff
is GTK/entity front-end for ripping/encoding/tagging CD audio, based very
roughly on grip. Released under the MIT license.
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GTKmp3make
by Andrew Moenk is based on the original console mp3make, and adds a GTK
GUI with simple controls. It uses the CDDB database for track rip selection
and naming of the MP3s, and supports cdparanoia and cdda2wav for CDDA->wav.
Linux/UNIX Console Frontends
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cdr by Mike Hardy is a GPL'ed perl
script. cdr stands for create/duplicate/rip and is a console based frontend
for ripping/encoding/decoding/cutting. It uses dialog to provide an ncurses
interface.
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ripEnc by Michael J. Parmeley is a GPL'ed bourne shell script frontend
to Cdparanoia, cdda2wav, tosha and Bladeenc, 8hz-mp3, l3enc. It utilizes
CDDB lookups to automate the naming of songs as they are ripped. A manual
naming option is also available. The entire CD can be ripped or you can
pick the songs to rip.
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ripit by
Simon Quinn is a small front-end program written in perl for ripping, encoding
& tagging MP3s. It is a console program that needs no user intervention.
It requires cdparanoia, bladeenc and xmcd (for CDDB access).
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123MP3 by
Brett Nuske is a frontend to BladeEnc and CDDA2WAV that produces MP3s from
selected tracks on a CD in one automated process.
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BladeWrapper
by Claudio Matsuoka is a very simple public domain C wrapper that handles
terminal I/O and allows bladeenc to run in background, which can be useful
to encode a large batch of files. Progress and ETA are reported in the
process name and can be checked using ps(1). Verbose output is enabled
when the process runs in foreground.
Other Software
-
BeOS,
the media OS by BeInc uses BladeEnc as
of version 5 Pro (Personal doesn't) to provide system wide mp3 encoding
capabilities. Unfortunatelly is the version they are using (0.82) quite
out of date now, so an update would be nice ;)