If you check the FAQ for EAC, you'll find it's creator says, "sorry... no mac support".
Only one way to slice up this turkey... see if it'll install... right? I'm thinking it won't. AS it would make sense to me that the Windows on Mac is an emulation, and the core (kernel) of the Mac is going to be non compliant. Stranger things have happened though...
As far as importing the file types into itunes, the supported ones should pose no issue during import if the right codec is being used. EAC offers support for many, and itunes also has a broad range it allows for in total.
What I'm missing I suppose is the way iTunes sounds off a Mac. Knowing nothing of that sonic output, I can only surmise it must be better than iTunes on a Windows platform. On Windows iTunes can easily be bested by other media players. Neither do these other media players encounter the sloppy navigation and skipping, iTunes often produces.
The only thing iTunes has going for it is it's versatile, easy to learn, and it's free... but better is definitely out there.
Only one way to slice up this turkey... see if it'll install... right? I'm thinking it won't. AS it would make sense to me that the Windows on Mac is an emulation, and the core (kernel) of the Mac is going to be non compliant. Stranger things have happened though...
As far as importing the file types into itunes, the supported ones should pose no issue during import if the right codec is being used. EAC offers support for many, and itunes also has a broad range it allows for in total.
What I'm missing I suppose is the way iTunes sounds off a Mac. Knowing nothing of that sonic output, I can only surmise it must be better than iTunes on a Windows platform. On Windows iTunes can easily be bested by other media players. Neither do these other media players encounter the sloppy navigation and skipping, iTunes often produces.
The only thing iTunes has going for it is it's versatile, easy to learn, and it's free... but better is definitely out there.