oldmankit Posted July 10, 2009 Posted July 10, 2009 Hi, I regularly need to write one mp3 file to CD to play in my classrooms (I'm an English teacher). I've bought a good quality CD-RW, and so can write the single file and it plays fine - using the write .CUE file function. However, every time I want to add a new mp3 to the CD, I have to clear the whole disk and start again. This is annoying, because I want to keep the store of all the old MP3 files for future use. Is that clear? I want to write one MP3, use it in a lesson. Next time, I want to ADD another MP3 file, so I now have two MP3s. And so on, until the CD is full. Is that possible? Thanks, Kit
LIGHTNING UK! Posted July 10, 2009 Posted July 10, 2009 No, ImgBurn doesn't support doing that. Don't you all have PC's now? Can't you stick it on a USB stick?
oldmankit Posted July 10, 2009 Author Posted July 10, 2009 No, ImgBurn doesn't support doing that. Don't you all have PC's now? Can't you stick it on a USB stick? Thanks for clarifying - at least I know now! Do you know of other programs that do support it? I love imgburn but it would be a handy feature that I would consider trying another program for. Yes indeed we do have USB sticks nowadays, but my CD player/radio doesn't support that kind of technology! Cheers, Kit
LIGHTNING UK! Posted July 10, 2009 Posted July 10, 2009 I meant don't you all have PC's in the classrooms... obviously I didn't expect a radio/CD player to accept a USB stick You'd need software that supports TAO (track at once) burning and multisession type capabilities (I say 'type' because it's not actually multisession - they wouldn't work). You might even find that Windows Media Player can do what you need.
oldmankit Posted July 10, 2009 Author Posted July 10, 2009 I meant don't you all have PC's in the classrooms... obviously I didn't expect a radio/CD player to accept a USB stick You'd need software that supports TAO (track at once) burning and multisession type capabilities (I say 'type' because it's not actually multisession - they wouldn't work). You might even find that Windows Media Player can do what you need. I'll have a go with that then. With thanks again.
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