Usually the software that came with your cd drive can do it for you. I use CD Creator (which came with my CD drive), and it pretty well walks you through the process, beginning with a menu that asks you what type of cd you want to create (select audio CD, of course.) On the next pane it shows you a screen that looks a lot like Windows Explorer with an extra panel that shows you what you've put on the CD already. All you do is drag the music files from your hard drive to the CD panel. The software tells you how much space you've used and how much space is left. Most software these days take care of converting MP3's (assuming that's the format of your music files) into uncompressed audio format. When you're done with dragging files, you just press the red record button at the top of the screen, and that's about it. (Of course, you have to put a blank CD in your drive before you start recording.)
Having said that, check if the CD player you're using supports MP3 format. If it does, you're better creating a data CD with all the MP3's. You can fit something like 20 songs on an audio CD and about 200 songs on a data CD full of MP3's, plus MP3 disks tend to be easier on the batteries because the laser's not constantly on.
2007-02-07 10:58:19
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answer #1
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answered by Rando 4
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from ur cd to a pc? go to windows media player, go to the rip tab, press start rip. make sure the cd is in the comp first.
2007-02-07 20:50:43
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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