To put music from a USB stick onto a CD, it must first be downloaded to the computer. Then the music files can be burned (downloaded) onto a CD using the CD-ROM.
If you want to create your own CD with your own music playlist, you can use a program such as iTunes. You can create your own playlist using music files you have downloaded and then easily burn them to a CD with the click of a button.
Yes either click on iTunes store or go into music minimize then click and drag in. Most files downloaded elsewhere or from your CD's can also be used in iTunes. You can add files from your computer locally.
Most music programs like iTunes and Windows Media offer both of these features, so this should relate to all of them.Rip = means to put the music files from the CD onto your computer's hard drive. For instance when you load a CD into your computer using iTunes or Windows Media player and you want to add the music to your "Library" you choose, Rip. This will take the music from the CD and "Rip" it to your hard drive.Burn = means to take the music files from your computer, and record them on to a blank CD. So when you select the music files that you want to put on a blank CD you would use the "Burn" option to record the music to the blank disc.
It all depends on the capability of the drive you are using to "play" the music. You could use CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW on a DVD player for instance. If you are using a CD player in an older car...it might only accept CD-R. There are also two ways to record music (on, lets just say for giggles) a CD-R. You can create a CD with music format files (typically WAV files) or you can create one full of small MP3 files. WAV files play only 74 minutes worth of music. An MP3 could play for hours and hours. Some car CD players don't like MP3 formats. The newer cars typically do.
CD-R means you can only write/record files to a CD/DVD one time. CD-RW means you can write/record files to a CD/DVD and then re-write new files or delete old files from the said CD-RW. CD-RW hold less than CD-R's and they tend to get buggy the more times you add/edit/delete/re-write over them. Also if you are lets say burning music to a CD to play in your car or something some CD-RW's are not really compatible with standard car stereos.
Providing the MacBook Pro is connected to a network of some kind then all manner of files (including music files) can be downloaded onto it.
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.
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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
To record music.
Record all your files through your CD ROM on a DVD-RW, using UDF system so that you can modify, erase or record new files. (Just drag the files onto the CD-ROM folder.