Introducing
The Slant team built an AI & it’s awesome
Find the best product instantly
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now
4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Sound Juicer?
Ad
Ad
Rubyripper
All
6
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Graphical user interface
Your only option for a secure ripper with a GUI as of 2019.
See More
Top
Con
Ripping takes at least two times as long as some quick-and-dirty burst-mode ripper
...but for a bit-identical copy of your audio CD you were expecting that, right?
See More
Top
Pro
Good innovative error detection(/correction) mechanism
(On top of its cdparanoia backend.)
See More
Top
Con
Usually not present in default software repositories of your favorite Linux distribution
(as of 2019)
See More
Top
Con
No support for AccurateRip or similar service
(For verification of rips against results of other people.)
See More
Specs
License:
GNU General Public License (GPL), version 3
Hide
Get it
here
25
0
ABCDE
All
5
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Command-line tool with prompts
Very easy to use.
See More
Top
Con
No GUI
If you need a Graphical interface then this isn't the tool you are looking for.
See More
Top
Pro
easy customization via text configuration file
See More
Top
Pro
Allows submitting of new CDDB data, even if data exists for matching CDs
See More
Top
Pro
Audio files post-processing option.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
56
3
Whipper
All
5
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Actively developped
It might be the only secure ripper for GNU/Linux that's in active development besides Rubyripper as of 2019.
See More
Top
Con
Might refuse service if it can't access impeccable metadata for your disc
Must use --unknown flag if ripping a CD which doesn't have a matching TOC in the MusicBrainz database.
See More
Top
Pro
Most features
(of any secure ripper on Linux so far (2019))
See More
Top
Con
No graphical user interface
As of 2019 there is no GUI available yet, so some users may be repelled or have a steep learning curve. If you can't do without a GUI you may want to give the somewhat more limited Rubyripper a try.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Linux
License:
GNU General Public License (GPL), version 3
Hide
–
11
2
ripperX
All
9
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
4
Top
Pro
FLAC encoding
See More
Top
Con
No choice of file type
This is only for Ubuntu.
See More
Top
Pro
Simple to configure and execute
See More
Top
Con
No alternative to freedb
With freedb going offline, there's no clear way to get cddb info.
See More
Top
Pro
Encodes CDs
See More
Top
Con
No unicode support
See More
Top
Pro
Configure interface allows easy tuning of output quality
Enables access to some of the more advanced features like scratch repair or FLAC compression level.
See More
Top
Con
It does not encode CD
See More
Top
Pro
Can easily be patched to work with www.gnudb.org (after freedb having gone offline)
Recompile ripperx v2.80 with patch from here.
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
480
52
Asunder
All
9
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
3
Top
Pro
Easy to install
Can be found in the official repositories for most distributions.
See More
Top
Con
Does not support MusicBrainz for tagging
See More
Top
Pro
Allows specifying encoder options
See More
Top
Con
Segmentation error
Ubuntu 18.04 - start from command line: "Segmentation fault (core dumped)". From GUI it does not start at all. Let's google a bit..
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
Small memory footprint.
See More
Top
Con
Lacks a path example to see as you select (like easytag)
See More
Top
Pro
Very stable
Works great for creating a lossless audiophile collection of owned CDs.
See More
Top
Pro
Allows ripping in multiple formats at once
See More
Top
Pro
Very easy to use
Supports Gnudb (including the proxy setting). Supports many output formats, with a simple interface.
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
235
67
Built By the Slant team
Find the best product instantly.
4.7 star rating
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now - it's free
{}
undefined
url next
price drop