because the disc player is probably old
and so it does not have the ability to read mp3 format
because if you burned it as a data disc instead of a normal audio disc
it wont play it make sure its compatible with mp3!
if this is not the case then may your player is broken !
time to get a new one and if u do
get one that says mp4 compatible
Sometimes the encoding on a CD is in different formats. It is possible that if it is burned/made on a computer that it will have different encoding that the kind used in CD players.
This depends on your headunit, most factory head units in older cars will not, many aftermarket and newer car headunits will play burned cd's
i burned a CD using windows media player, but can't play it on another player
You may have burned it in the wrong format which your cd-player may not be able to play. You could have also burned it on a type of disk that your cd-player is unable to read for example lets say your cd-player only plays CD-R and you are using a CD+R
A Numark USB turntable connects to the USB port on a computer and converts vinyl records into a digital form. They can then be played on an mp3 player or burned on to a CD.
Best player in the history of FC Reading is Gylfi Sigurdsson.
When someone gets a disc reading error while listening to a cd it is a sign of the disc being dirty or damaged. Try cleaning the disc. If that doesn't help the lens in the cd player maybe dirty.
With the correct software you can watch a DVD on any computer (try getting vlc media player)
In most cases a CD player will reject CD's for the same reason: The CD isn't reading the disk. That could be from the wrong file type of the data written on the disk which your CD player wasn't designed to play, the lack of a TOC (table of contents) or the disk wasn't closed when it was burned on a computer, providing a TOC. The other possible causes could be scratches on the disk to heavy for the laser to get a lock, the laser itself not focusing or you've put the disk into the CD player upside down (labels up).
Perhaps if you were more specific? If a DVD you burned is "unreadable", then it's probably because either your computer/dvd player does not have the proper codecs necessary to play it back. Try googling either the name of the DVD player you're using OR the software you're using to burn with and find out what type of file it can read / or burn in that is compatible with most consumer DVD players and computers.
To stop a computer from buffering (stopping) try getting the download for the latest adobe flash player. You can also try getting a faster Internet connection or try YouTube or whatever other streaming site during a less busy time.
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