CD quality refers to the amount of detail saved to an audio file that would be typical of what you would find on a CD. This is measured in how often a change in the sound wave is detected, known as the sample rate, and to what level of detail this change is measured to, known as the bit depth.
Sample rate is measured in kilo-hertz (kHz), or thousand samples per second. For CDs this 44.1kHz.
Bit depth is measured in bits, which is the number of binary digets each sample uses. For CDs this is 16bit.
The sound quality of a WAV (CD) is just the same no matter what the source.
BLER is a good measure of CD quality, but it's very subjective.
Its color indicates its quality
Short run CD duplication involves creating multiple copies of a CD without compromising the quality of the CD. Many musicians will have their demo created this way to keep the sound quality.
Panasonic offers portable cd players of good quality at a good valuable.
The higher the speed does not necessarily translate to a higher quality CD. The higher the speed indicates the amount of time it will take to complete the transfer of music to the CD. 4x is a speed that will create a good quality.
that depends on the size of the cd ( as in how much memory it can hold) and how high the quality of the pictures is.
Yes! The higher quality CD players have better capabilities on playing burned CDs.
If you want to make cd labels at home, it is possible to produce a high quality label. It will take a good quality printer to make this happen.
It means better quality and more resistant to scratches, and those are the best Cd's
Yes, if transfered directly from the CD or store download.
You usually can tell when there is:- CD is a CD-R (sometimes)- No inner pages of the booklet (often)- Low quality smudged/scanned-like booklet (often)- Bad quality print or no printing on CD (often)- Code ring near the hole in the bottom side of the disc doesn't have the factorys name (almost always)- Possible decline in audio quality (rarely)