Record the tape using the audio line in, save as a wav,mp3, any thing like that. Then burn on to an audio CD
The number of cassettes that can fit on a CD depends on the storage capacity of the CD and the size of the cassette. A standard CD has a storage capacity of 700 MB, while a typical cassette tape can hold around 90 minutes of audio. To calculate how many cassettes can fit on a CD, you would need to convert the total storage capacity of the CD to minutes of audio, and then divide that by the capacity of a single cassette tape.
because the sound quality was worse than Cd's and they get wrecked easier
use your sound card line in jack to get audio into the computer. you will need a program to convert the audio to mp3 or other usable format. then it can be written to CD or e-mailed.. good luck
Audio cassettes have positive and negative aspects about them. The good thing is that they allow the listener to rewind to a specific spot in a song, unlike a CD or mp3 is able to do. The downside is that most cars no longer have tape decks, and songs are no longer recorded on cassette.
Cassettes ARE magnetic recording tape. You can record these onto a computer and then burn them to CD, or use a standalone CD recorder to transfer the recording.
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
3 to 5
well your mums fanny is quite hot so i rekon it can burn something :)
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.
Ripping.
Yes it is possible to play cassettes through a car CD player by using a cassette to digital adapter. The songs on the cassette will be transferred into digital format.
Windows Media Player, iTunes or any CD burning software can do this