no
You did not use the software that came with the player to convert the music to the format the the mp3 player was designed to play.
The term "Podcast" were first used in 2004. Combining "iPod" and "Broadcasting". It did not require a iPod, any MP3 player could play the files. A "Podcast" is only Apple's word for "recorded radio shows", and basically anyone could publish one.
The term "Podcast" were first used in 2004. Combining "iPod" and "Broadcasting". It did not require a iPod, any MP3 player could play the files. A "Podcast" is only Apple's word for "recorded radio shows", and basically anyone could publish one.
mp3 is used to create a podcast
It is a speaker for mp3 player to play music loud.
A CD player cannot play mp3 files. However, mp3 music can be burned onto a CD-R and played on a CD player.
No you can't. mp3 players are meant to play songs (mp3 format) not videos (mp4 format). You can put them in, but you will not be able to play them on your mp3 player.
not unless the CD player can play mp3 cds.
Because you have a MP3 player that can only play MP3 audios, but M4A can't play on a MP3 player because M4A is an MPEG 4 and your MP3 player is a MPEG 3. The MPEG 4 is to powerful or high for the MPEG 3 (4 is bigger than a 3).
Your player may not support MP3. Your mp3s may be encoded in a way which is not compatible with your CD player. Many CD players cannot play variable-bitrate mp3s for example. Sometimes my car stereo (which supports mp3) has difficulty with some of the cheaper CD media. Cds which are odd colors are often not readable by in-dash players.
They are probably the wrong file type. Make sure they are .mp3 files.