Select the right disc, and the carousel and ejector do their thing, once again. You can use controls on the Library to dial up a particular slot (whereupon the carousel rotates to the right point, and a pusher arm delivers your disc), but you can also connect the Library to a PC or Mac (the DC-101 was Windows-only) and create a database of disc contents, so you can easily look up the one you want. The Dacal CD Libraries aren't CD/DVD jukeboxes they contain no drive mechanism, and can't read the discs you put in them.They're just motorised, database-backed, USB-connected disc es with 150 slots on a carousel. The new DC-300 can briefly be described as the same thing, only more so.If you want a fairly automatic indexing system for a bunch of 120mm discs, one or more DC-300s will provide it. A Linux interface for the Dacal CD Library II, using a USB C-program and command-line interface.I 's DC-101 CD Library more than a year ago now. Last modified 0.Download Dacal CD Library II Linux interface for free. Quick Shot review 5: Dacal Technology CD Library II Review date: 3 October 2003.