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Thread ID: 146559 2018-09-09 00:32:00 Copy Disk free Programs. Poppa John (284) Press F1
Post ID Timestamp Content User
1453432 2018-09-09 00:32:00 Hi All.
We have a new lady in this rest home,nearly blind can onnly see out to 300mm. She likes he same type of music that I do, I would like to give her some of mine. Hwich is the easiest simplest program that I can use to go disc to disc. Yes I know it could be naughty but she is 85, give her a break. PJ
Poppa John (284)
1453433 2018-09-09 01:42:00 Been so long, always used to use Nero for that.

What you should be able to do with windows Media player is rip a disc to the hard drive as .wav files so you don't lose any quality, then burn them back to disc also using media player and making sure you are burning an Audio disk not a data one.

If that seems too complicated maybe try one of these www.lifewire.com the first one looks promising.
dugimodo (138)
1453434 2018-09-09 01:57:00 There are of course a LOT to choose from, but ones that's probably one of the easiest is Anyburn http://anyburn.com/

It really cant be any easier-- Simply put your CD in the drive. Click "Copy Disc to another Disc" - the next window opens click "Copy now", it will check the CD, copy to your Hard Drive as an image file (temporally) once done will spit out the CD and a pop up appears, you put in a blank CD, give it a few moments to detect a Blank CD, click "OK", it will take a few minutes but it will start to write to the Blank CD, Once done it checks to make sure its copied correctly, then spits it out -- That's it :)


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wainuitech (129)
1453435 2018-09-12 04:29:00 Hi gang When I format a disc I it usd to sow FAT32 as an option amongst others. It doesnt show that anymore, it offers UDF xxx for instance. Most of my copying is like this. What is UDF xxx.

I am still trying copies from Wainuis 'Anyburn' which sems asy but doesnt work for me.The drive is ,DVD-RW (D) in Propeies. Brand is, TSST corp, CDDVD SW-208GB. I am using CD-R discs. Trying to copy a disc I have bought or a namlesone makes no difference. So the problem seems tobe me. PJ.
Poppa John (284)
1453436 2018-09-12 04:42:00 If you are using Anyburn there is no need to format the disc first, it'll sort that out for itself if you follow Wainuis screenshots. (in fact you don't want to format it first, that won't work)
So will media player in my suggestion, you just tell it to burn an audio Cd and it takes care of it for you.

The only time you would normally format a CD before use is for rewritable discs used as removable storage, for any other Cds it's normally done all at once by the software you create the disc with.

FAT32 is for hard drives and sometimes USB flash drives, optical discs use different file systems one of which is Universal Disk Format, or UDF
dugimodo (138)
1453437 2018-09-12 04:45:00 If you are using Anyburn there is no need to format the disc first, it'll sort that out for itself if you follow Wainuis screenshots. (in fact you don't want to format it first, that won't work)
So will media player in my suggestion, you just tell it to burn an audio Cd and it takes care of it for you.

The only time you would normally format a CD before use is for rewritable discs used as removable storage, for any other Cds it's normally done all at once by the software you create the disc with.

FAT32 is for hard drives and sometimes USB flash drives, optical discs use different file systems one of which is Universal Disk Format, or UDF

So are UDF & FAT 32 compatible?Thre dosnt sem an optio, I dont really understand. PJ
Poppa John (284)
1453438 2018-09-12 04:57:00 Not really, but they don't need to be. They are just different file systems for different disc types and both are compatible with your PC. There is no need for them to be compatible with each other if you see what I mean, each has it's own purpose.

You use FAT32 for a removable USB flash drive for example and that lets you read and write files to the disk as normal, and you use UDF for an optical rewriteable disk so you can read and write files to that in the same way.
From the point of view of using it you wouldn't know the difference. Not many people actually use optical discs this way though because they are really slow and flash drives are more convenient.

To copy a disk or to burn a data disk onto a CD-R you just use a blank, unformatted disk.
Put the original audio CD in, click the button as per Wainuis screenshot, make sure the same source and destination drive letter is selected, and that both are saying audio CD (should be automatic)
When you get to the part where it wants a blank disk you just put a fresh new blank disk in, no formatting it first. You can also treat Rewriteable discs the same with the only difference being they can be erased later.
dugimodo (138)
1453439 2018-09-12 05:16:00 I will ry Anyburn again after tea. Thanks. PJ Poppa John (284)
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