If there is mp3 in an standard audio CD, it is on a data track, and thus not playable on a regular CD player because it is not an audio track.
It depends on what you mean by "run the audio file copied from a CD." If you mean you copied a track straight off a CD onto your computer's hard drive then you have two choices: create a virtual CD-ROM drive to play the track; or, two, convert the audio file to a format the media player you have on your PC can play (mp3, wma, etc.). In either case you'll need special software to create the virtual drive or to convert the audio file for playing. If neither option is for you then you should still be able to play your audio CD from your CD-ROM drive using the default audio software that came with Windows.
Audio MiniDisc usually. As opposed to Audio CD (compact disc) or even DataMD (Minidiscs which record data, or audio AS data, such as in multi-track systems.)
An Audio CD is a type of CD that has audio files on it that can be read by a CD player like a stereo
No, Toast created Red Book CD audio discs that conform to the established standards, and cannot create a track before track 1. You can create a 'hidden' track by sticking extra content at the end of the last track with a suitable gap. Just insert a 5 or 10-second gap at the end of the last standard track and then the extra audio.
put the audiotracks first, then datatrack with the autorun and exe files as the last track on the CD
If the audio is on a CD, you first need to make it into a file with a CD ripping software such as CDex or Windows Media Player. When you have the file, you can email it as an attachment to the reciepient
Several French publishers have audio books in their catalogues - try looking for livres-CD.
An audio CD is a compact disc containing audio data according to the Red Book standard.
you can use DVD audio ripper to rip audio from DVD and then play on CD player
A CD track in uncompresed audio (WAV or PCM format) uses 11.0 MB per minute, which is 0.011 GB per minute.
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.