If you have a regular car stereo than you cannot leave your files in the original mp3 format because they will not be read. Before burning your CD you have to convert the files into a regular music file. All CD burning programs allow you to do that, there is usually an option to either burn a music CD or an mp3 disc. Choose to burn a music CD. Some car CD players will accept mp3 discs in which case you can leave the files in their original format. The benefits of this is that you can fit a lot more songs on a CD and the track names will be displayed (where possible).
In order to transfer mp3s on a disk you just need to burn them. If your stereo doesn't read mp3s than you need the appropriate software to convert them. Go to google, type "mp3 to wav," click on the program of your choice.
Physically, no. But you can download songs from cd's onto iTunes along with mp3's and can listen to both the mp3's and songs from the cd's on an iPod or mp3 player.
Your player may not support MP3. Your mp3s may be encoded in a way which is not compatible with your CD player. Many CD players cannot play variable-bitrate mp3s for example. Sometimes my car stereo (which supports mp3) has difficulty with some of the cheaper CD media. Cds which are odd colors are often not readable by in-dash players.
Playing a CD requires a CD player. Then just insert the disc and press play!
The easiest way is to rename the files, ie: Track001.mp3, Track002.mp3, etc.
Sometimes. The CD player has to be designed to play MP3s. Most old players do not, and even one or two new ones do not.
You can burn MP3s to a CD and they'll play just fine on almost any modern CD
if you are holding a CD that you can play in any CD player like a walkman car or your home stereo then it cannot be changed. it is a permanent CD. if it says CD-rw (rewritable) on it, the CD can be appended in a CD authoring program, but will only be playable by a computer's optical drives. unless you finalize the CD which allows it to be played by most non-computer CD players.
For the most part, car CD changers will be obsolete, because many car stereo systems now come with MP3 players built in, so many people will not even need a MP3 player to hear MP3s in their car.
You will have to burn the music onto a CD as the stereo will not accept the DVD.
The purpose of a CD stereo system is to play music on CDs very loudly. CD stereo systems can be purchased at such stores as Best Buy, Future Shop and Amazon.
For your own personal use - yes.