Because - during the conversion from analogue to digital, the computer or recording device 'strips out' frequencies that are outside the human auditory range. We still here the tune, but are unaware that there has been some sounds removed. The digital tune still runs for the same length of time as the analogue version.
The Pioneer CD-P680 can play MP3 files, as well as WMA files.
A CD player cannot play mp3 files. However, mp3 music can be burned onto a CD-R and played on a CD player.
The easiest way is to rename the files, ie: Track001.mp3, Track002.mp3, etc.
No. The data is digital the entire time and doesn't degrade by copying. Just make sure its a you burn a "Data Disc" with the MP3's on it as opposed to a "CD Audio Disc".
If you have mp3's on a CD then all you have to do is copy the files over. No ripped/recording etc. necessary. Copying a whole CD worth of mp3's to your computer wont take more then 5 minutes.
No, it doesn't.
mp3 is a high-compression encoding format for encoding audio files. CD,which stands for compact disc is a storage device.Any kind of information can be stored in a CD if there is a proper software and at least one CD/DVD drive.mp3 files can also be stored in CDs.
Most mp3 players (china made) specially with built in memories will keep saying no nand files. It is not a copy paste from a computer or any media to your mp3 players. Instead, You have to rip your mp3 files from cd and copy it to your mp3 player
No, unfortunately you can't. I wish it did, though. Apparently Lincoln didn't add a CD changer that played mp3 files until the 2007 model.
http://portables.about.com/od/mp3players/ht/howtoripCDWMP10.htm
No, our 2004 Sienna with premium sound does not play MP3 files.
It is a CD, but instead of having stand CDA (CD audio) files on it, the disc has MP3 files on it. It wont play on CD players that only play CDA, but it should play on any CD player that supports MP3 decoding.