No. .cda is simply a shortcut on an audio CD to uncompressed audio data. .mp3, by contrast, is compressed. If you tried to copy a .cda off a CD directly, the file would not work once the disc was removed.
It is a CD, but instead of having stand CDA (CD audio) files on it, the disc has MP3 files on it. It wont play on CD players that only play CDA, but it should play on any CD player that supports MP3 decoding.
It depends what software you are using to burn the CD. Most software will offer you a choice, before burning, of creating an Audio CD, MP3 CD or a Data CD. Make sure you have ticked the MP3 option before burning the CD. ITunes, for example, will offer this choice and then burn the selected Playlist to the CD.
I can name about 10! wma, cda, ogg, aiff, acc, pcm, wav, mp3, m4p and mid I can name about 10! wma, cda, ogg, aiff, acc, pcm, wav, mp3, m4p and mid
No, there different types of audio compression. I belive the compression ratio for mp3 is 11:1.
MP3
Just Export as MIDI file.. Then, convert MIDI file to Mp3 file.
Well, I would recommend converting wav files to mp3 files with a wav file to mp3 file converter. There are many wav file to mp3 file converters offered for use.
.mp3 is a file format. others include .ogg .wave and others
It means that it is not the correct mp3 file. You should go at the proper location for the mp3 file.
I'm using Cubase 4 but the same method should apply to other versions. File >Export >Audio Files Then select your target destination and change the file type to .mp3
You can't unless you rename the file with a .mp3 extension.
Like all files, an .mp3 file is software.