Yes.
Yes. The other computer should have a program (like windows media player) that will "rip" the music from the CD-r provided that it is burnt as a regular audio CD. If the files on the CD are already something like MP3, then you can just copy the files from the CD to the computer.
Open your music manger on the computer. Put the CD in the reader on the computer. You will see it load and show up on the manger. Go up to the menu and hit the burn button. The CD menu will show with the names of the all songs on it. If you want to put in all the songs check them. If you only want one or two from that CD check the songs you want. The computer will copy the songs to your CD library and from that you can put them on a MP3 or I Pod.
THINGS YOU WILL NEED:* A Computer with sound* A 1/8" (3.5mm) stereo audio cable* Audacity Audio program (FREE)* Lame MP3 encoder (FREE)* Cassette player* Cassette TapeI found a very useful step-by-step guide on how and where to install audacity and lame. how to connect the cassette player to the computer and tips on how to record the audio. there are even pictures to explain everything better.
it would be 2mb due to compression programs.
Well, If you download iTunes, then you should just be able to put the CD in the disk drive and open iTunes, then it will let you download the CD onto iTunes and it will be in your computer! Yay!
Definitely. Most music downloaded from the iTunes store or imported from a CD is coverted to 256K AIFF. If you import MP3 or WAV files from your computer, they will be synced to your iPod as those types as files.
Yes, but if you sync your iPod with that computer, the CD will be erased from your iPod, so I would recommend leaving the CD on iTunes.
This is a problem... For as long as you have original CD, there is no legal problem to use the same CD in mp3 downloaded from internet. For this I use www.tunese.com
Some CD's can not be converted into MP3 files. If when placing the CD in the computer it does not offer to save the songs then the disc is probably locked. If it does offer right click and hit save here and click iTunes.
If the CD is mp3 then yes.
plug in your iPod.(to the computer!) insert your CD. some thing will pop up. click import CD for the whole thing, or click the boxes and click import for just those songs.
Most iPod hookups in cars will, indeed, attach to other MP3 or CD players.
There are several ways to do this. If you have the song you want on a CD, you can insert the CD into your computer, the rip the song from your CD to itunes, then proceed to your library and add the song from your library to your iPod. You can also download mp3 files from several sources. If you download an mp3 file, all you have to do is find where you saved it on your computer (usually found in My Music, or Documents, or sometimes if its only one file it will be on the desktop) and then drag the file in the itunes window, and it will be added to your library. then you can drag the song from your library to your iPod.
No you need a special cable like the Pioneer CD-iU50 USB-to-iPod Adapter.
load the CD into your computer rip the songs into your computer then sync those songs into your iPod
maybe you had put it on a wrong folder or you had put it on a folder but your mp3 player doesn't have the feature to read beyond folders. . . . I have burnt a mp3 CD as a data CD and plays all the songs on my computer and on home DVD player as well but cant be played all these songs on my car stereo- kindly advise me how can I play all these mp3 songs recorded on CD as a data CD in my card stereo too?
I believe they invented the MP3 player so people don't have to take their cars with them every where they go. Plus so people can have music to listen to.