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Old 04-12-2007   #6 (permalink)
emanon
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Re: Vista and Burning CD's


"John Barnes" <jbarnes@email.net> wrote in message
news:%23$SYW2TfHHA.4704@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
>I wasn't talking about computer CD players. I was talking about stand
>alone players, like boom boxes. Car players I didn't say anything about,
>only asked if he was sure his was MP3 capable. As to the rest of your
>asinine ramblings they can stand on their own. I copy MP3 files to CDA
>every day to play on my other standalone players.
>


And in creating a CDA, they are no longer MP3. That is what your original
post implied you were interested in doing: play MP3 format CDs in a vehicle.
Many people do this because you can get around the usual 80 minute time
constraint of the CD media. If you copy all you files as MP3, then you can
pack around 700 MB of material onto a single disk, regardless of play
length. You may have different maximum capacities depending on your media or
your hardware. The playback catch is, you must have a drive capable of
playing MP3 music files. As I said, more vehicles are coming so equipped and
vistrually any PC with a media player will do the job.

One caution relating to the quality of the MP3: the more you try to compress
it, the more the sound quality degrades. There are two corrollaries to this:
1) NEVER compress an MP3 after the inital conversion and 2) you can NEVER
recover what has been lost. This is the real tragedy of many traded music
files. Someone will minimally compress an MP3 to preserve as much of the
quality as possible. Then someone else will try to fit this on their CD and
find they need a high compression. This double compressed file is now passed
off. Someone else receives this file and says, oh wait, let me store this at
a lower compression so it sounds better. NOTHING IS REGAINED.

The same applies to people that receive an MP3, then create a CDA CD from
the MP3. Whatever was lost during the original compression stays lost. The
first pass drops all frequencies outside of 20 - 20,000 Hz and any frequency
also below a particular amplitutude. Once eliminated, these frequencies
cannot be recovered. If a second MP3 is created from the reconstituted CDA,
the sound quality is absolutely awful.

Of couse you can disregard all these quality issues if your sole goal is
cramming your portable player full as much as you can.

> "emanon" <emanon@erehwon.com> wrote in message
> news:OJPbPgTfHHA.4636@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
>>
>> "John Barnes" <jbarnes@email.net> wrote in message
>> news:udBKCTTfHHA.1456@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
>>> Almost no CD players support MP3 format disks. Are you sure your car
>>> does? All disks must be closed before they will be able to be played on
>>> another

>>
>> You are very much behind the time on this topic. More and more vehicel
>> steros are "MP3 Capable". Virtually any PC with QuickTime, to name just
>> one product, can play an MP3 file written to the CD . . . unless you are
>> lazy and do not read the prompt asking if you want a music CD or a data
>> CD. By selecting Data CD, you accept the file as is, i.e. MP3 files are
>> copied to the CD as MP3 file and not translated to CDA.
>>
>> You are partially correct about closing the CD. This is a step I always
>> do as it ensures the disk will be read by another device. Leaving the
>> disk open *usually* allows the disk to be read ny the same drive that
>> created it, i.e. you want to burn additional files to the same CD at a
>> later date.
>>
>> As for WMA, what is that? It must be some propietary standard because no
>> one I know uses it. I only use CDA or MP3 because anyone can play them.
>>
>>
>>> "Andrew Watkins" <thvoicwethin@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
>>> message news:OJQF15SfHHA.2396@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
>>>> Im using Vista to Burn my Cds but when the progress starts it says
>>>> formatting 574 (or something like that) and it will not play in my cd
>>>> player, nor my car (and my car nav system supports mp3, wma, wav,
>>>> etc.). All the files were transferred from .wma to .mp3 by a program.
>>>> Can anyone help me with this?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Thvoicwethin@hotmail.com
>>>

>>
>>

>



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