You can save them in a file that lets you play the music like iTunes, Windows Media Player, Quick Time, something like that and make a playlist and burn them to a cd.
http://portables.about.com/od/mp3players/ht/howtoripCDWMP10.htm
You can transfer files from an audio CD to your laptop. The process of doing so is called ripping. Many CDs use the .cda format while some others use .mp3. If the CD is copyright protected, you may not be able to transfer the files onto your computer.
on many koz players on your computer you can transfer them to an audio CD... once on the audio CD you can then transfer them back to your computer by simply using windows media player... and they will come out in an mp3 format. little tedious but it works
The Pioneer CD-P680 can play MP3 files, as well as WMA files.
Some CD's can not be converted into MP3 files. If when placing the CD in the computer it does not offer to save the songs then the disc is probably locked. If it does offer right click and hit save here and click iTunes.
A CD player cannot play mp3 files. However, mp3 music can be burned onto a CD-R and played on a CD player.
The difference is the type of media being used. an MP3 CD player will play mp3 cds that you burn yourself with a PC. They will soon go the way of the VCR. An mp3 player has a flash card or hard drive inside to which you will transfer files you wish to view/listen to.
You can transfer music files to any mp3 player (unless the files are corrupt) but you cant use iTunes to transfer them. Only iPods work with iTunes.
The easiest way is to rename the files, ie: Track001.mp3, Track002.mp3, etc.
No. The data is digital the entire time and doesn't degrade by copying. Just make sure its a you burn a "Data Disc" with the MP3's on it as opposed to a "CD Audio Disc".
If you have mp3's on a CD then all you have to do is copy the files over. No ripped/recording etc. necessary. Copying a whole CD worth of mp3's to your computer wont take more then 5 minutes.
No, it doesn't.