Most CD burning software will burn .wav files to CDDA (CD Digital Audio). Nero, Roxio, etc, you just need to burn the files in 'audio' mode. For good free burning software that will burn .wav to CDDA (and most other audio file types) try 'burrrn' http://www.burrrn.net/?page_id=6
Convert the files to .wav format, then burn them to disc. Some cd burning programs will let you skip the conversion step by printing them to CD as an image.
I Have a older sony CD player and MEMOREX CD-R record off my computer will not play All CD players will play songs that are in a 44.1 Khz Wav format. You may have to copy the CDs recorded files to your computer, reformat to 44.1 Khz Wav, then burn them to a new CD.
You can indeed burn a CD that already has files on it. You would just have to write over the other files on the CD.
i have a few flv files that i am trying to burn on a cd how do i go about doing this?
A full tutorial would be much too long to type out here, so, for the sake of brevity, I'm going to assume you're trying to burn it as an audio CD, and not a data CD. To do this, the files have to be in .WAV format... if you downloaded it, it's probably in either MP3 or iTunes format. You'll need a converter which can format that to .WAV format... a quick Google search will point you in the right direction for freeware in this regard. Once the files are converted to .WAV, they can be burned as an audio CD. If this does not rectify your problem, there's an email address in my profile page which you can email me at, and we'll work to get the problem sorted out.
Did you burn wma files to the CD? Most likely it will not play that format. Need to use a program like Nero or Roxio to burn an audio CD format from wav files instead.
Create Data CD with any available CD burning software and insert the files. Burn.
It depends on the context ! In computing terms - burn files relates to copying files to a CD or DVD.
Create Data CD with any available CD burning software and insert the files. Burn.
Yes you can burn those pictures as data files onto a CD and it will hold thousands!
Yes, normally. Wav from CD (which is actually "Red Book Audio" but it rips to .wav) is 1411 kb/s. MP3 (at largest size) is 320 kb/s, and most MP3s are smaller than that. Wav in most cases is 5-10 trimes larger than MP3s.
on the computer