Everything about Mp3 Cd totally explained
MP3 CD is a term used to refer to
compact discs (usually
CD-R or
CD-RW) that contain
MP3 files. Discs are
burned in data mode (like a
CD-ROM), as opposed to
Red Book format as with standard audio CDs (CDDA).
MP3s are supported by many modern
CD players, including
DVD players. There are also CD players capable of playing
WMA and
Ogg Vorbis files, and on
Sony-brand players, audio encoded to their
ATRAC format (originally created for the
MiniDisc).
Because of this
audio data compression, the disc doesn't have to spin all of the time, thereby saving
battery power. The song is
buffered in
memory, which also provides protection against
skipping.
The number of songs a disc can hold depends on how the songs are encoded. A standard audio CD (650 MB) can hold about 20 songs, an MP3 disc about 150, and a data CD about 185 AAC song files. A DVD can hold almost five times as many songs as a CD. (From iTunes Help on mp3 CDs)
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