If you burn Mp3s to a CD (Burn as DATA not Audio), then you will be able to fit far more music onto it.
Providing you have a CD player that can play back DATA CDs this will work much better for you than burning audio.
Instead of having upto say 20 tracks you could have 300 on one disc!
mp3+g files are on karaoke cds
Yes, you can transfer audiobooks from CDs to a SanDisk MP3 player by ripping the audio files from the CDs to your computer and then transferring them to the MP3 player using a USB cable. Make sure to use the compatible audio file format supported by your MP3 player for playback.
MP3 files are definitely compatible with iPods, as are MP4 files. WMA files are NOT compatible and need to be converted into MP4 files. I recommend Kigo Video Converter, just be sure to change the output to custom MP4.
you cant sync mp3 files to your laptop if its not compatible
The process of creating MP3s from music CDs is called "ripping".
You could use software that will burn with MP3 compression. However those CDs will then only be playable on devices compatible with MP3 CDs. An MP3 CD can store 8.5 hours of audio.
No, you can just copy the audio files onto the MP3. You may have to convert the audio files though.
You can use any major media program to burn audio CDs from mp3 files, but you will probably not be able to fit all the songs on to one disc. MP3 CDs are offered usually because of the length of the recordings require the mp3 compression.
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).
Yes, the SanDisk Sansa MP3 players are compatible with Rhapsody. Additionally, they'll work with any music service that sells MP3 files like Amazon Music or Napster since MP3 files are universal and all MP3 players (including the iPod) will play them.
Not all do play mp3 files, you have to look at the radio some play mp3 and other wma files, Toyota 2005 and up play them, some Ford 2006 and up gm 2007 and up
Copy CD music to localhost and convert audio to iPod compatible format(mp3, aac, m4a).