Re: Can't copy music onto a blank CD
I think an even better idea for the OP is to take this time to switch over to a digital music playback environment for all your locations and ditch the physical CDs altogether. My 10,000+ CDs are are stored away, never to be used (I hope) again.**
So OP needs:
1. home: something like a squeezebox, or sonos, or netbook, etc. (all with or without some additional DAC) that plays FLAC files to his home system. I use squeezebox players through out the house, fed by my digital music server located in a back closet containing all my music. All controllable via laptop, iphone or ipad. So my complete collection is searchable, playable, etc. at my fingertips without finding or changing out the CD. And I can create some very interesting custom random mixes as well.
2. car: any number of players that can connect to his car system via cable or bluetooth. I used to use an ipod with AUX in cable in car. Now I mostly just use stuff off my iphone connected to car stereo by bluetooth. I have a mirror mp3 library I created from my FLAC files to use in my portables.
3. portable: see 2 above.
**I keep my CDs even though I never use them. In the United States (where I am) and many other countries, it is only legal to retain digital copies of your music ripped from a CD if you also keep the CD. In these countries, legally speaking, if you sell your CD, you must delete the digital files and any duplicate CDs you have. I realize of course that the police are not likely to track you down for this legal violation.
I think an even better idea for the OP is to take this time to switch over to a digital music playback environment for all your locations and ditch the physical CDs altogether. My 10,000+ CDs are are stored away, never to be used (I hope) again.**
So OP needs:
1. home: something like a squeezebox, or sonos, or netbook, etc. (all with or without some additional DAC) that plays FLAC files to his home system. I use squeezebox players through out the house, fed by my digital music server located in a back closet containing all my music. All controllable via laptop, iphone or ipad. So my complete collection is searchable, playable, etc. at my fingertips without finding or changing out the CD. And I can create some very interesting custom random mixes as well.
2. car: any number of players that can connect to his car system via cable or bluetooth. I used to use an ipod with AUX in cable in car. Now I mostly just use stuff off my iphone connected to car stereo by bluetooth. I have a mirror mp3 library I created from my FLAC files to use in my portables.
3. portable: see 2 above.
**I keep my CDs even though I never use them. In the United States (where I am) and many other countries, it is only legal to retain digital copies of your music ripped from a CD if you also keep the CD. In these countries, legally speaking, if you sell your CD, you must delete the digital files and any duplicate CDs you have. I realize of course that the police are not likely to track you down for this legal violation.
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