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Audiograbber 1.83

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filesize 1.59 MB
This copies music from CDs and external sources like radios, cassettes and turn tables.
Published: Feb 9, 2004
Published by: Audiograbber
www.audiograbber.com-us.net
License Freeware
$0.00 to purchase
Trial Period:
OS: 98 / NT / 2k / Me / XP / 95
Cow Rating: 5ra
Popularity: 100%
User Rating:
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Below is a list of video tutorials related to the software download on this page.
The music is saved to your hard drive as WAV, MP3, WMA and OGG files.

It has normalizing, encoding, Freedb, ID3 tag and CD-Text support. The line-in sampling function can automatically split recordings from LPs into separate tracks, and it works with a noise reduction plug-in from Algorithmix.

It can schedule recordings for when you are away, and Audiograbber is multilingual. Common languages are included in the setup file, while others can be downloaded from the home page. It also handles copy-protected CDs and CDG karaoke disks.

6 comments
martinreinell
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Jun 07, 2009 | 07:15 PM
Is Audiograbber for Vista as well?... I can't seem to get it downloaded on my Vista...
hawgly
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May 31, 2009 | 06:57 PM
It really is FREE and VERY fast! Able to create partial audio clips with fade in or out from CDs. Has no internal MP3 encoder, but if you want files with an actual MP3 format and extension, download the LAME encoder from the AudioGrabber website. We use this program in our recording studio to create sample audio clips for our music websites.
roskie2008
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May 31, 2009 | 04:17 AM
Audiograbber is a great programme. I use it to capture streaming audio. The person who commented below id wrong, it does do this, use "File/Line in Sampling" which opens up a new screen with timing controls etc. You can start recording then adjust time/tags etc once its going. I've used it for a while and its my favourite for capturing radio etc
melharvey
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Nov 15, 2008 | 04:37 PM
This is absolutely the best audio ripper I've ever used. It opens in a flash, rips the CD tracks in no time at all, and just does everything as simply and completely as can be.
brightlight
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Apr 26, 2008 | 09:12 AM
For grabbing CD's, this program is more sophisticated than Windows Media Player . It cannot grab streaming audio but dear vjtraveler, it it nowhere says it can! I use it for recording from analog sources (such as vinyl) which works very well, with nice options. I like it, considering it's freeware.
vjtraveler
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Apr 22, 2008 | 10:47 AM
This description is incomplete. It doesn't really explain what sources of audio it uses. I wanted to capture streaming audio, and this doesn't. It uses CD player listings to select album cuts, then you use the software to convert them to mp3. The Desc needs to more clearly explain what it does and does not do. Since Windows Media player has a record capability, I don't understand why you would need this software.
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