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Posted by Don M. on 03/18/06 20:48
<normanstrong@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:uK6dnVQ5KKmD2IHZnZ2dnUVZ_tGdnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
> "iws" <iws51remove@cox.net> wrote in message news:TKJSf.348$Vy.163@fed1read02...
> > "dadiOH" <dadiOH@wherever.com> wrote in message news:AmlSf.14712$o41.3525@trnddc06...
> >> CTG wrote:
> >> > So would it be fair to say if I copy a whole list of MP3 songs to a
> >> > CD-R ,my CD player at home woudl play them..? or do they only play
> >> > CDDA files?
> >>
> >> No, you can't *copy* MP3s to a CD and expect your home player to play
> >> them. As Joel told you, you have to make an *audio* CD with them.
> >
> > That's not universally the case. Many players today will play a CD that
> > has
> > had mp3's simply copied to it. I know because I have a couple including a
> > portable that plays both standard CD's and CD's loaded up with mp3's. The
> > OP
> > might want to consider investing in a new player that can play mp3's on
> > CD's. That way he avoids the 80 minute limitation of the standard CD.
>
> I recently made a 2-sided DVD-RAM disc containing 430 hours of wma coded
> music. It plays on my Panasonic DVD recorder. Fidelity? Good enough that
> nobody has mentioned it as being any worse than the originals. Piano music
> encodes even better. It the disc had been all piano, it would have held 720
> hours.
>
> Amazing what you can do these days.
>
===========
Yes, amazing. Hopefully hearing loss treatments are affordable these days.
Don
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