Usually 320KB/s.
Any CD player that has good sound quality should play audio books well. You can also listen to them on apps on an iPod device that offer audio books.
you can use DVD audio ripper to rip audio from DVD and then play on CD player
Home stereos could have a CD or DVD player in them. Car stereos could have a CD player in them. The 'best' format depends upon what your expectations of quality or compatibility are. For the best quality and compatibility, use CD-audio discs, with RedBook audio format. For the longest playing time, use MP3 encoded CD discs or USB media. This will not be the best quality, but will give you considerably longer playing time (typically 10x the time). Some other compressed audio formats, such as APE and FLAC exist with lossless audio quality comparable to CD-audio, but are not supported on many home or car audio players.
A CD is useful if you are going to play music in an older stereo or car. Most will have a CD player. Some newer CD players will play CD's with MP3 compressed audio, extending the play time by as much as 90%. A flash drive is useful if you want to hold more music (most flash drives hold much more than 1 Gigabyte (1024MB) of info, CD's top out at 800MB. Flash drives can also hold any type of compressed audio or higher-than-CD quality audio (higher than 16 bit, 44.1kHz). Flash drives also have no moving parts, and are not as susceptible to extreme temperatures, scratching or moisture.
yes
There are two main types of CDs to use for a CD burning process: audio CD and Data CD. Audio CDs can play anywhere while a Data CD can play on a computer but may not play on a standalone CD player.
No, a normal CD player will not play Super Audio. Most DVD players recognize the format, though. These would be able to play the music on SA CD's.
yes it can play in CD player but it plays with audio only and no video..
No, CD-players do not play DVD's. You have to use a DVD player.
Yes it will, there is no region restrictions on audio CDs
You usually can tell when there is:- CD is a CD-R (sometimes)- No inner pages of the booklet (often)- Low quality smudged/scanned-like booklet (often)- Bad quality print or no printing on CD (often)- Code ring near the hole in the bottom side of the disc doesn't have the factorys name (almost always)- Possible decline in audio quality (rarely)
Typically no, because the computer has the software to know to play the audio from it. Some DVDs do have separate audio tracks installed, which can be picked up by the CD player.