ElementalDragon
The One and Only
- Joined
- 8 Aug 2002
- Messages
- 3,159
i agree with Ming on that one. think u got conned, ripped off, etc... etc... Don't think i ever got ANY kind of hardware for a computer that did not come with screws.
Originally posted by ming
Wow.. you got conned when you bought your CDRW mate.
I got screws with mine!
i might've. but i also might have just gotten them and threw them in the pile with the rest and forgot.Originally posted by ElementalDragon
i agree with Ming on that one. think u got conned, ripped off, etc... etc... Don't think i ever got ANY kind of hardware for a computer that did not come with screws.
i have a 4-year old pioneer cd deck that says nothing about being cd-rw compatible, but it reads it fine. so try it in any player, even old, and you might get lucky.Originally posted by WiredBrain
1. Is it true that CD-RW cannot be used to create audio cd ?
which box? all burners i know of can do 700mb cd's (which are quite common) and burning more than that is possible, but is considered going past the specified limits of your burner. "overburning", it's called.Originally posted by WiredBrain
Another thing, on the cd burner box, it's stated that it only support cd up to 650 MB. Can I use cd larger than that ?
1. they say it can. nero warns you about possible damage to your burner once you enable the overburning feature. i've never heard of anyone ruining their's by doing it, though. maybe we'll hear of some now?Originally posted by WiredBrain
1. Is 'overburning' harmful to my cd burner ?
2. How can I undo the formatted cd ?
1. like i said, a quick erase just erases the TOC which will render it blank. a full erase goes over all the data on the cd.Originally posted by WiredBrain
1. What's the differences between a full-erase and a quick erase ?
2. Is VCD affected by the cd I used e.g. cd-rw or cd-r ?
no. you have to go through the 'audio cd' mode in nero.Originally posted by WiredBrain
If I choose to make a data cd with Nero but put in wav files, will it be playable in music player ?
creates a cd that contains both music tracks and computer files. music is recorded on the first track so that standard cd players will play your songs and ignore the computer files. your pc is able to view both types of file.Originally posted by WiredBrain
I don't really understand the Mixed Mode CD. Can anyone explain ?