You cannot change the data format once it has been written to the CD.
You will need to write another CD with the data in music format to play in a CD player.
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.
Put the Fearless CD in your computer CD/DVD drive and open it like you would a data CD or DVD. You will see the "enhanced content."
To use a CD, first insert it into a CD player or computer's CD drive with the label side facing up. The device will typically recognize the CD and either start playing automatically or prompt you to choose what to do next. You can listen to music, watch videos, or access data files stored on the CD, depending on its content. For data CDs, you may need to navigate through folders to find specific files.
It all depends on the capability of the drive you are using to "play" the music. You could use CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW on a DVD player for instance. If you are using a CD player in an older car...it might only accept CD-R. There are also two ways to record music (on, lets just say for giggles) a CD-R. You can create a CD with music format files (typically WAV files) or you can create one full of small MP3 files. WAV files play only 74 minutes worth of music. An MP3 could play for hours and hours. Some car CD players don't like MP3 formats. The newer cars typically do.
Ace Karaoke sells karaoke players and equipment. It also sells CD-G/DVD collections of popular karaoke music. The music can also be downloaded MP3-G format.
This file format of a CD is dependent on the program you use to rip the data off the CD. Normally it is in the Mp3 format, but if you use Windows Media Player to rip the songs off it will be converted into .Wav format. - CascadeNeko
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.
You can't format a CD-R, the data is irreversibly etched onto it.
CD-DA or .cda, also known as Red Book audio standard, the Sony Phillips compression algorithm created for voice digitization, but adopted for music CD's.
Formatting data on a CD usually refers to removing all information previously created on said CD. You sometimes format CD-RW before and after burning to assure a successful burn.
It has to be in music CD format. IT will not play MP3's.
it's binary data
any cd can hold video data but it will not be in DVD format, it will be in VCD, MPEG, AVI etc. DVD format, which is VOD, has large file sizes.
a CD that you store important information on (As distinct from a music CD)
To play in most CD players, the CD itself must have a specific format. In general, you can't burn individual files onto a data CD and expect it to work, regardless of what format the files themselves are in. Most CD burning programs offer "audio CD" as an option and will do whatever conversion is required for you.Some CD players can play MP3 files from a data CD. This allows you to fit a lot more music onto the disc, but not all CD players can read data CDs. Check your instruction manual to be sure (also, those that can usually say "MP3" somewhere on the player itself).
Yes. The length of songs actually has relatively little to do with the amount of music that fits on a CD. The amount of music that fits on a CD is determined by the size of the music files when converted to AIFF format, which is the format used for most standard CD audio. Generally, when you burn music to a CD, the computer converts the music as it burns it. Note, by the way, that computers do not burn onto CD-ROMs, but CD-Rs. A CD-ROM can only be written by special hardware that "stamps" the data into the disc in very precise patterns. Your computer writes patterns to a CD-R using a laser in the drive.
MP3 format data can be stored on a CD and played back on any MP3 compatible CD player.