![]() It seems more likely to me that this is what's happening on your system too.Įdit: Just noticed that the same user who posted on the Microsoft forums also reported this and the solution in the linked SourceForge thread. I also found this post on the Microsoft forums where a user reports that his firewall restricted access to CD drives for fre:ac: It's there on Windows 10 Pro, but at least in XP times it was found only in XP Pro, not in Home. Logs now list names of active DSP components. The remaining changes for beta 2 are: Logs now contain total duration and speed of conversions. I'm not sure if the Local Secruity Policy even exists on Windows 10 Home, though. fre:ac 1.1 beta 2 was released mid January and I already covered the most important changes in the December status update - fixes for SuperFast LAME encoding and support for accent colors on Windows 10. ![]() ![]() The solution from XP days is laid out in the following post from 2007: Hi Robert, Firstly, thank you so much for such a fantastic software So simple, fast and unicode tags-preserving Based on your reccommendation I replaced default FAAC with Apple Core AAC encoder in latest 'freac-1.1-alpha-20181201a-圆4' by extracting and installing 'AppleApplicationSupport64.msi' only, withot iTunes, and all went fine, now it's in the list. I haven't seen it with later versions of Windows yet, though. fre:ac is a multimedia application that converts audio files between different file formats. ![]() Well, the error message was very common in Windows XP times as Windows XP Pro indeed restricted access to CD drives by default. ![]()
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