It's not only possible, it's easy ... if you have some computer knowledge. Your computer must have a sound card, a quality music program, and a CD burner. If your cassette player has an outlet recepticle - or even better, stereo outlet recepticles, simply plug your wires out of the cassette player and into the musical input on your computer, You then activate your music program and follow the on-screen instructions. It may take you several tries to coordinate and time everything, but that is essentially how it's done.
2006-06-10 05:19:49
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answer #1
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answered by native01 1
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One way:
You need a cassette player that has a "line out" jack - those white and red RCA jacks.
You need a cable that converts the red/white pair to a single mini-stereo jack.
Connect the cassette player to the "line in" jack on the sound card of your computer.
Find a "WAVE" capture program. With it you can capture the music onto your hard drive as you play it on the cassette deck.
Find a CD creation program that can work from .WAV files (I used to use CDeX, but I think Nero might have the feature now.)
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2006-06-10 12:07:34
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answer #2
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answered by eric.s 3
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Yes, it is possible, but WHY? With all the excess noise on a cassette, why would you want to duplicate that to a CD? All you need is a cd recorder, hook the tape deck out to the recorder in and record til your heart is content.
2006-06-10 12:00:58
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answer #3
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answered by not4u2c_yet 4
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Connect tape player to pc, then burn(if you have a CD burner)
2006-06-11 16:15:10
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answer #4
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answered by 1/6,833,020,409 5
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Yes it is, but i really don't know how. I hope someone will help you. But trust me, it's possible...
2006-06-10 11:58:44
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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yes
2006-06-10 12:00:12
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answer #6
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answered by Samantha W 1
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course
2006-06-10 12:02:25
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answer #7
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answered by hayley_west_95 2
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its not possible
2006-06-10 12:03:26
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answer #8
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answered by ruchi 2
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