The 'iPod type music' is mp4 formatted music, which can be dragged from iTunes and burned on a blank CD.
To put music from a USB stick onto a CD, it must first be downloaded to the computer. Then the music files can be burned (downloaded) onto a CD using the CD-ROM.
A CD player cannot play mp3 files. However, mp3 music can be burned onto a CD-R and played on a CD player.
Only if it's labeled CD-RW or CD+RW
Yes. Once the disc is burned, it behaves just like any other CD.
Yes, as long as the cd isn't protected. A cd is nothing more then a memory device.
well, in most stores, the package will tell you whether or not you can put music on it. It will say how many minutes of music you can download to one disc. I don't think that you can add music to a CD if you've already finalized it. You'd have to erase it and start over.
You click F3 and a " add to library box '' will come up.
Both are blank storage media for computer or music data. The CD-R is differant from CD-RW's in that data can only be written to and not changed or removed. With CD-RW (ReWrite) you can overwrite sections on the disk to change what was previously burned onto it, once data is written CD-R's it stays there.
If your talking about a regular CD or burned CD like I burn them to my console it should take no more than 5 minutes depending on the number of soundtracks on the CD...but overall for me it's about 3 minutes per CD. If your talking about mp3 then you can play the music through a usb on the console but you can't rip it for some reason.
If the CD has been sealed then no you can't but if it hasn't then you should be able to by dragging and dropping the file into the CD drive on My Computer. If you need any more help email me.
The CD has to be CD-RW to be able to delete whats on the disk and add something new.