You need a program like Nero 9 or something and then you just put in a CD and choose what files you want it to burn onto it.
if there is nothing on it then you can burn files to it
you have to use a special software to erase the music off of the CD and then you will have to re-burn the CD
When you rip a CD, you are taking all data from the CD to transfer to something else, such as a computer. If you were to burn a CD, you are putting information on that CD.
Create Data CD with any available CD burning software and insert the files. Burn.
Create Data CD with any available CD burning software and insert the files. Burn.
Sure. Provided the MP3s don't have DRM protection on them, you can easily burn them to a CD with most burning programs. If you want a CD that'll play in regular CD players, burn it as an "audio CD". If you only need to use it in other computers, you can burn it as a "data CD" instead.
No. Digital recordings are like copying any other digital data. If you do not loose data you do not loose sound quality.
Formatting data on a CD usually refers to removing all information previously created on said CD. You sometimes format CD-RW before and after burning to assure a successful burn.
Yes, you can burn a pdf or any file (a file not exceeding the data capacity of the cd) to a disk. You should be able to burn it on any computer that can burn a cd, without having extra software. With windows or a mac, you can burn files without another program.
If you just copy MP3 files to a CD, then this is a data CD meant to work in a computer, it will not play in a regular CD player. You need to use a special burning tool to burn it specifically as an audio CD not a data CD.
The illegality of burning a borrowed CD depends on the contents. When the CD is copyrighted, it is illegal to burn it. However, burning of home videos, documents and other non-copyrighted data is allowed.
A CD writer is a computer device that writes to ('burns") CDs.