Re: new to windows, need help with software selections


 

To be honest if you don't mind the 40 dollar pricetag, goldwave as well as a sound editor has a really good cd wripper using the freecddb.
If you have been a nero user, then this is good.
The only reason I'd ever use something like cdex is that like itunes its got gracenote intergration which has a slightly better and bigger following than freecddb.
Saying that freecddb aint far behind gracenote, and as long its not that obscure even though you can get multiple disk titles for one disk its still good.
The advantage that gracenote may have is that its payed for library and its in a lot of things from itunes to whatever.
Those with a supporting product are able to easily make their own list and automatically import it to gracenote directly.
The advantage of freecddb is that along with searching, you could download the entire thing over a gb or so to your system though I see no advantage in doing that.
Its also easy to search and free, though its worth saying there is nothing background like, there are progress windows and the such while things are gotten if you don't care for that gracenote is your friend.
Thats about the only difference and for most stuff things work fine.

On 16/02/2017 9:09 a.m., Kwork wrote:
Gene, I hadn't looked at the portable version, so that's good news to know when someone asks me next time what I'd recommend for a good ripper/file converter that still receives updates, even if infrequent.
Travis
----- Original Message -----
From: Gene
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2017 4:12 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] new to windows, need help with software selections


The program didn't used to include unwanted programs. I didn't install it today but I was curious what was displayed in the preinstallation dialogs so I went through them up to the point where other programs were offered. To the credit of the CDEX designers, you are clearly told that other programs will be installed, though not in that language. The installer doesn't try to sneak the other programs by without you noticing as is often the case unless you are very carefull about reading all installation dialogs thoroughly. But whatever means are offered to opt out are not seen by screen-readers. I saw on the page where you download the program that a portable version is offered. The portable, version, according to a comment I've seen on another list, doesn't include any potentially unwanted programs. Therefore, those wanting to use the newest version of CDEX may try the portable version.

Gene

----- Original Message -----


From: Quentin Christensen
Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2017 3:14 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] new to windows, need help with software selections


Eek! Sorry! I haven't installed from scratch for awhile clearly and didn't remember that or I definitely would have warned you!


Quentin.


On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 3:51 PM, coffeekingms@... <coffeekingms@...> wrote:

hi

Thanks for all your suggestions. I just installed the cdex software using the link you provided. As a warning to all of you, if you do install this software, you might need sighted help to uncheck the option to install recommended software, because there seems to be no accssible way to decline it. If you do install the cd ripper as it wants, you'll get the following additional software

avast antivirus

bite fence antimalware

chromium

advanced pc care

stack player

and your homepage will be set to yahoo web search in your default browser. I'm still puzzling over how to remove avast, since I can't seem to click or simulate a left click on the uninstall button, NVDA can't seem to route the mouse pointer to the uninstall button using the caps lock plus kp devide shortcut, but the others were easily removed. Despite all of this, I like cdex. I don't like the sneaky bundling of software, and I'm rather shocked that open source software would stoop to such a tactic. I'm not annoyed at anyone hear though, I want to make that clear but at the extra installations. I am going to install chrome and try it out, since I did like chromium in the few minutes I played around with it.

Thanks

Kendell Clark






On 2/14/2017 9:32 PM, Quentin Christensen wrote:

Hi Kendell,


Welcome to Windows, and to the NVDA list!


CDex is a popular CD ripper: http://cdex.mu/ It looks up freedb and others (you can set the one you want). I must admit I always just rip to MP3 so I haven't looked into other formats with it. Just looking at the features, you can set it to use OGG, FLAC, AAC, WMA and other formats.


I'm not as familiar with downloading videos, or torrent programs I'm afraid.


I tend to steer clear of driver downloaders - you just don't know what they are downloading and I think most of them cause more problems than they solve. Mostly I let Windows manage drivers and it does do this a lot more autonomously than it used to. Sometimes it is worth double checking you are using the manufacturer's driver, though, particularly for audio and video drivers and in that case, I usually go to the manufacturer's website.


I'm not sure about that file error you're getting. AMD will be your processor and sys means it's a system file, possibly a driver, as you seem to have guessed, but beyond that, I'm not sure. Is anything happening immediately prior to it crashing? I did a google search on the filename and got nothing (5 unrelated results) so whatever it is, it's evidently not overly common.


Speaking of the Chrome browser, you'll actually find that it works fairly well with NVDA if you do choose to install it. The popular browser with NVDA has traditionally been Firefox, but it can be worth keeping Chrome around just for the odd website that works better with one than the other. Internet Explorer still works and still comes with Windows, even Windows 10. If you are on Windows 10, we do support the new browser "Edge", though personally, I'd still stick with one of the others for the most part.


If you are after a word processor that isn't Microsoft Office (MS Office works well with NVDA, but you asked about free), Jarte is a standalone one: http://www.jarte.com/ otherwise, LibreOffice is a full office suite: http://libreoffice.org/


If you used Audacity for audio editing on Linux, you'll find it is available for Windows as well: http://www.audacityteam.org/


I can't think of what else to recommend off the top of my head, but all the best with your migration and do let us know if you encounter anything else you need help or a recommendation on.

Kind regards


Quentin.


On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 2:04 PM, coffeekingms@... <coffeekingms@...> wrote:

hi all

I'm a bit ashamed to say this, but I've just switched from linux,
specifically sonar gnu linux, to windows 10 full time. There are many
reasons why and I won't go into them hear since this is the wrong list,
but the windows blind community is just friendlier and much much less
prone to judge people based on what software they want to use, what
speech voice they want to use and so on. I was hoping you guys could
point me to some free as in price, and open source if possible, software
to do the things I've gotten used to doing in linux. I'll provide a list.

A cd ripper, preferably one that can look up info on cd databases, and
if such a thing exists, one that can look up data on audiobook cd's,
since the ones available for linux can't. It would be nice if it could
rip to opus or ogg vorbis files, preferably both, since I don't care for
mp3 and use free to use media formats like ogg or opus for everything.
Something that can download videos from youtube, entire playlists if
possible. I've found youtube dl gui for this, but it leaves the video
and audio tracks separate, instead of combining them so I have to
manuallt delete them. An audio converter, so I can convert mp3, m4b, etc
files into the formats I prefer to use. I've come across format factory
and already wrote about it hear, but it doesn't seem to handle opus so I
may need to use something else. I've just discovered kodi, the htpc
software. Can it handle using services such as spotify, pandora and
last.fm? I don't use any of these yet, but I'd like to start, assuming
spotify and pandora are still free to use. Accessible torrent software.
I've been usint q bittorrent, and it is usable but not very accessible.
I want torrent software for legal things, not the pirate bay and such.
Even though I'm no longer using sonar I still want to support it's
torrent seeds, as well as other linux distro torrents such as vinux and
fedora. Is there a good free program to keep drivers up to date? If
these are still needed. My computer is experiencing frequent bugcheck
screens from something called amdkfb.sys, and I thought maybe a free
driver updater would download an updated driver that would fix it.
Something that doesn't nag you to upgrade to a pro version would be
nice, and that can be run portable would be even better, but I don't
want to be picky. I'm only asking for all of these instead of doing my
own research because I'm frequently lead around in circles. Sites that
say a piece of software is free, when what they mean is free but comes
with extra stuff, free trial, or not free at all and they want you to
pay for it. Driver updaters that aren't accessible and often install
extras, such as pc care, pc cleaners, and the chrome browser. Are there
good ways of avoiding these kinds of things? I'm new to windows after
being in linux for five years so I might as well be a first time windows
user. Thanks for any help, I'll try not to ask for this much help again.

Thanks

Kendell Clark











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Quentin Christensen
Training Material Developer
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