Why won't a FLAC file burned to CD play?
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Re: Why won't a FLAC file burned to CD play?
I was looking to burn copies of my original CD to keep in different vehicles and to keep my original disc in perfect condition. Probably old school tendencies from years past of keeping vinyl records in perfect condition by recording to cassettes. Man, I just dated myself!nero can burn an audio CD, other programs exist as well. The key bit of info is that copying a FLAC file to a CD-ROM will *not* turn that CD-ROM into an audio CD that plays in a regular CD player.
Curious: Why the need to play back a copy of the CD once you have the FLAC files? Do you have something connected to your home stereo that can play FLAC (and car stereo, etc.). Just curious....Comment
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Re: Why won't a FLAC file burned to CD play?
I did the same with vinyl and cassettes back in the day so I could play in the car. (Heck, I taped albums on to 8-track tapes so I could play in car...that's really dating myself!). I understand the motivation now. Of course, I haven't played a CD in a car in at least 10 years. I used to hook up my ipod to car stereo. Now I just play music from my iphone via bluetooth through my car stereo. I still buy lots of CDs. But I open them, rip them to FLAC, read the booklet, then file away, hopefully never to be opened again until someone throws them out or gives them to charity when they clean out my house after death, the same way people trash old cassettes today.I was looking to burn copies of my original CD to keep in different vehicles and to keep my original disc in perfect condition. Probably old school tendencies from years past of keeping vinyl records in perfect condition by recording to cassettes. Man, I just dated myself!
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