Yes, if you purchase an audio CD from the store it will be virus free. Though, if you burn a CD or rip a burned CD to your computer that has audio files on it from file sharing programs such as Limewire and Frostwire then it does have a chance of having a virus on it. iTunes downloads are also virus free, and if they are burned onto a CD they will remain virus free.
Hope this helps.
You can find several free yoga lessons online by just typing "free audio yoga" in google, but no free physical CDs
Regular audio CDs are uncompressed, therefore no. MP3 CDs generally support vbr however.
you can use MED Free Audio Ripper Free audio ripper can rip CD tracks from CD to MP3, WAV, WMA, and OGG
Books on CDs can be purchased from various places, including online retailers like Amazon, bookstores, and audio book subscription services like Audible. Additionally, libraries often carry a selection of books on CDs that can be borrowed for free.
Most can
Yes it will, there is no region restrictions on audio CDs
Yes.
yes it can play audio and video DVDs and CDs
An Original Xbox and 360 both have to have audio cds in order to download the songs and will not be able to read mp3 cds. To make an audio CD download iTunes and when you start to burn the CD select "Audio CD".
Normal audio CDs hold 700 megabytes of data.
Yes
Audio CDs can be played by CD players and radios. The music CDs of your favorite artists that you buy are audio CDs, and they have nothing on them except audio signal. Data CD is a CD that can contain different types of data such as photos, videos, mp3 files, text files, etc. Data CDs are normally usable only on computers. However, there are radios and DVD-players that can scan through a data CD and find files that can be played on that particular player (for example, mp3 files).