And Ed, this website and many more which I went through yesterday, I
cannot understand at all, and it all left me in a quandary.
Marta
On Jul 12, 2010, at 08:07 AM, Marta Edie wrote:
But Ed, what I do not understand is that their disk does play on
that player. Why would their disk then play and the one I made
would not? That is my question. I played it and made a cassette
from it. That will work for awhile, but when they start streaming I
will be in the same fix.
So, what do you suggest? I need to solve that problem somehow.
It does not matter what the disk is burnt on, the endproduct in my
computer, the burnt disk, simply won't play-- period. So I have to
find a way to just dub from disk to disk , or do something in the
computer to produce a different end product.
Marta
On Jul 12, 2010, at 07:38 AM, Ed Wiser wrote:
Marta, what you are dealing with is standards. Some units do not
play burned CD reliably this can be caused by the CD burning
media or the chip used in the player to translate the 1’s and 0’s
that the laser burns into the ink layer that burned disk’s use for
recording.
The standard is : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_
(audio_Compact_Disc_standard)
Not all manufactures follow the standard so a burned disk can
have issues when trying to be played.
The computer will work because a computer manufactory such as
Apple expects at some time that a burned disk would be used.
A stand alone CD unit may or may not expect a burned disk to be
played in the player an so may use a chip set that will play
Stamped disk’s which is how bought from the store CD’s are made
using a glass master disk but will not play a burned disk.
Also not all CD player will play Mp3 disk’s this requires a more
expensive chip set than the basic audio chip set and a lot of CD
players do not include this or charge a higher price to compensate
the use of the more expensive chip set.
For a basic CD for a certain number of track’s iTunes does fine.
In your case they had to burn the file as an Mp3 file for it to
fit on to the
CD do to the size of the file. They could not burn it as a
straight Audio CD due to the original size of the audio file.
740 meg bits is all that fits on a Audio CD and the mp3 file would
be larger than the size of the CD after it is transcoded to the
larger file size of the Audio CD format.
From: [email protected] [mailto:macgroup-
[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marta Edie
Sent: Sunday, July 11, 2010 6:59 PM
To: Topics related to Apple and Macintosh computers
Subject: Re: [MacGroup] addendum
Yes, an MPEG audio file. Sorry. This all has me so confused, and
it drives me crazy when I can't figure something out.
I don't do much importing from the iTunes store. They were
always protected files and you could not even share one song with
the friend over the computer. I rather bought my CDs and then
imported them if I wanted them in my computers.
So I never paid much attention to copying and playing on a CD
player. But now I am confronted with making copies that play on an
outside of the computer unit.
Marta
On Jul 11, 2010, at 18:35 pm, David Harker wrote:
i take that to mean it was an mpeg file.
On 7/11/10, Marta Edie <[email protected]> wrote:
Always forgetting something. I guess I should mention that with
importing the CD, it means importing it into my iTunes, I have no
other means to burn a CD, but import and burn. In fact, checking
out the way this CD came into iTunes is as MEG audio.
Marta
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