by masturbating to murlocs. murgle gurgle.
you can use DVD audio ripper to rip audio from DVD and then play on CD player
CD Roms can only Read CD's such as VCD, Audio CD, mp3 CD.DVD Roms can read any CD's such as VCD, Audio CD, mp3 CD and also read DVD's such as DVD Video, DVD Audio & DVD mp3's.
No, CD-players do not play DVD's. You have to use a DVD player.
Using a audio DVD extractor like Handbrke to do this job ...
Yes, it can be placed there as audio files playable on the PC and in many modern DVD playback devices. Also, an audio format exists, just like with the CD (the CD-Audio format), and is conveniently named DVD-Audio.
In 99.99% of all cases you should be able to. All respectable DVD players can and will read an Audio CD.
No. Audio CD's hold audio only while DVD's hold movie formats, such as; .avi, .wmv, .mpeg-4, .mpeg-3, etc.
It is impossible to make an audio DVD that would play in a CD player. DVDs are made for DVD players, not CD players. You could use iTunes to make a Data DVD, but that still wouldn't play in a CD player. It might not even play in a DVD player. Sorry, you'll probably have to stick with CDs for audio.
Yes, you can record LP's to CD's or DVD's. In order to do so, you need to connect the LP player using a Y audio cable to the computer. You will also need a program to convert the input audio into an MP3 or WAV file. Once you have captured the audio, you can save the files directly to a CD or DVD or use a CD writing program to create an audio CD.
Dvd player
A DVD (digital video disk) is used for video and audio media.
CDs play on two 16 bit 44.1 kHz channels and work on both DVD and CD players. DVD audio (DVD-A) requires a DVD player to work. It uses higher sample rates - up to 24 bit 192 kHz with stereo, but generally uses 24 bit 96 kHz - and can work on anything ranging from mono to 5.1 channels. That is not DVD-V. The difference is in terms of audio quality since the DVD-Audio format has 7 times more storage capacity then a regular CD-Audio. This means that you can actually hear the audio content on a DVD-Audio the best possible way ever since both the sample rate (192kHz) and the bit depth resolution (24bps) are higher then a regular CD-Audio (44.1kHz, 16bps) and would actually exceed the human hearing capability.