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- From: fadden@fadden.com (Andy McFadden)
- Newsgroups: comp.publish.cdrom.hardware,comp.publish.cdrom.software,comp.publish.cdrom.multimedia,alt.comp.periphs.cdr,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.answers
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- Subject: [comp.publish.cdrom] CD-Recordable FAQ, Part 2/4
- Followup-To: comp.publish.cdrom.hardware
- Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about CD recorders, CD-R media, CD-RW,
- and CD premastering.
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- Archive-name: cdrom/cd-recordable/part2
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- Last-modified: 2004/04/15
- Version: 2.53
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- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: [3] How Do I...
- (1998/04/06)
-
- This is general information about recommended ways to do specific tasks.
-
-
- Subject: [3-1] How do I copy a CD-ROM?
- (2002/12/02)
-
- Just about every piece of CD recording software comes with a CD copier.
- In some cases it's a stand-alone extra, in some it's integrated with
- other features, and in a few cases the software does nothing else.
-
- Most disc copying software will allow you to make a CD image on a hard
- drive that can then be written to multiple CDs. A few will allow you
- to record the same image to multiple CD recorders simultaneously (see
- section (3-17)).
-
- It's important to remember that, when copying directly from one CD to
- another, the source MUST be faster than the target, and must be
- error-free. If the source pauses or spins down to read a marginal area of
- the disc, the target may outrun the source, and the CD-R will only be
- useful as a frisbee. Most programs have a "test write" feature that put
- the CD-R device into a mode where it goes through all the motions but
- doesn't actually write anything; it's a good idea to do this right before
- copying something for the first time.
-
- If you're wondering about copying Mac CD-ROMs on a PC or vice-versa, see
- section (3-50).
-
- Some suggestions for software good at copying a variety of discs:
-
- CloneCD (6-1-49)
- Very good at copying difficult (esp. copy-protected) discs.
- CDRWIN (6-1-7)
- Good at copying discs, also very nice for fancy audio CDs.
- Disc Juggler (6-1-27)
- Can copy to more than one device at a time.
- CDRDAO (6-1-47)
- Runs under a wide variety of operating systems.
-
- For copying simple audio CDs and un-protected CD-ROMs, standard
- applications like Nero or Toast will work just fine.
-
- See section (2-4) for more information about copy protection, section
- (3-51) for the details on "RAW" reads, and (3-4) for some notes on game
- console discs.
-
-
- Subject: [3-1-1] Why can't I just do a block copy like a floppy?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- CDs don't have circular tracks. They're laid out on a spiral, with
- multiple sessions composed of multiple tracks composed of sectors, and the
- data in the sectors is interleaved and spread over a large area. The
- sector format is standard, but there's more than one standard.
-
- "The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from."
- -- Andrew S. Tanenbaum, _Computer Networks_, 2nd ed, p.254
-
- The ability to read certain portions of a CD depends on the CD firmware.
- Some CD players aren't capable of understanding multi-session discs or of
- reading audio tracks as digital data. Jitter, described in section (2-15),
- is also a problem for most drives.
-
-
- Subject: [3-2] How do I extract tracks from ("rip") or copy an audio CD?
- (2002/12/09)
-
- Start with the CD-DA FAQ [once at http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/~psyche/cdda/,
- currently missing?] Take a look at http://come.to/cdspeed to see if your
- CD-ROM drive is up to the task. EAC, from http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/,
- is often recommended for extracting ("ripping") audio tracks.
-
- To copy from CD to CD, the source drive needs to support digital audio
- extraction, which is rare among older drives but universal in current
- models. Ideally, the copy program will use disc-at-once recording to
- produce a duplicate that mimics the original as closely as possible.
- As with copying CD-ROMs, you must be able to read data off of the source
- drive faster than your recorder is writing. If you can only extract audio
- at 1x, you're not going to be able to do a CD-to-CD copy reliably.
-
- If you're just interested in extracting digital audio, you don't even need
- a CD-R unit, just a CD-ROM drive that supports Digital Audio Extraction
- (DAE) and some software. The CD-DA sites noted at the top of this section
- list drives that support DAE, have software to evaluate your existing
- drive, and have links to several different DAE applications.
-
- Different drives can extract digital audio at different speeds. For
- example, the Plextor 6Plex can extract audio at 6x, while the NEC 6Xi can
- only extract at 1x. Most recent drives extract at well over 20x, which
- is about the limit for an IDE drive that doesn't support DMA.
-
- Some CD-ROM and CD-R drives have trouble extracting digital audio at high
- speed, so if you're getting lots of clicks and pops when extracting you
- should try doing it at a slower speed. You may also run into trouble if
- you try to extract faster than your hard drive can write. One user found
- that he was able to eliminate clicks and pops by defragmenting his hard
- drive. Another found that the Win95 "vcache" fix (section (4-1-2)) solved
- his problems.
-
- It should be pointed out that, while digitally extracted audio is an exact
- copy of the data on the CD, it's an exact copy as your CD player perceives
- it. Different drives or different runs with the same drive can extract
- slightly different data from the same disc. The differences are usually
- inaudible, however. Some newer drives will report the number of
- uncorrectable errors encountered, so you can get a sense for how accurate
- the extraction really is.
-
- The quality of the audio on the duplicate CD-R, given a high-quality
- extraction, depends mostly on how well your CD player gets along with the
- brand of media you're using. See the next section for some comments about
- avoiding clicks and pops.
-
- Some older drives have trouble starting at the exact start of audio tracks.
- The extraction starts a few blocks forward of where it should, and ends a
- few blocks later, so the track may not sound quite right and the extraction
- program will report errors at the end of the last track. See section (4-19).
-
- The Lite-On LTN483S 48x CD-ROM drive has a fairly unique bit of brain
- damage: it doesn't extract the last two seconds of a track correctly.
- This is only apparent on audio CDs with a "cold stop", where the music
- plays right up to the very end of the track. If the track has two seconds
- of silence at the end, there are no apparent problems. Apparently
- there is a firmware fix for this (the PD03 update), available from
- http://support.euro.dell.com/de/de/filelib/download/index.asp?fileid=R20664
- or http://support.dell.com/us/en/filelib/download/index.asp?fileid=R20664.
-
- One minor note: the data on audio CDs is stored in "Motorola" big-endian
- format, with the high byte of each 16-bit word first. AIFF files also use
- this format, but WAV files use "Intel" little-endian format. Make sure
- your software deals with the endian-flipping correctly. Byte-swapped CD
- audio sounds like "static".
-
-
- Subject: [3-2-1] How do I remove the voice from a CD track, leaving just music?
- (2003/11/29)
-
- A common reason for wanting to do this is to have a disc that can be sung
- along with, either for personal practice or for karaoke. There isn't a
- perfect method for doing this, but it's possible to get close with some CDs.
-
- Music is generally recorded in independent tracks and then mixed into a
- balanced whole. The recording studio can create masters with or without
- the vocals, which is where a "clean" karaoke source comes from. The music
- is usually recorded in stereo, and the vocals in mono (the singer has one
- microphone). The mixed result has slightly different signals on the left
- and right channels for the music, but the same signal on both channels
- for the vocals. By removing all signal components that are equal on the
- left and right channels, the vocals can be removed with relatively little
- distortion of the music. This is called "center channel elimination".
-
- This doesn't always work out in practice. If the track in question doesn't
- keep the vocals "centered", all bets are off. Many musicians apply effects
- to the vocals to achieve a certain effect -- often, to make it sound like
- they can sing better than they actually can. These effects aren't usually
- "centered", so part of the voice remains.
-
- Center channel elimination can be done with a good sound editor, such as
- Cool Edit 2000 or GoldWave. The procedure to follow with Cool Edit is:
-
- - Extract the CD track into a WAV file.
- - Load the WAV file into Cool Edit.
- - Create a new window with no WAV file in it (File->New...). Set the
- settings at 44.1KHz 16-bit *mono*.
- - Switch back to the original WAV file (with the "Window" menu).
- - Select the entire left channel in the original WAV file. If you move
- the mouse to the top of the WAV display area, the mouse cursor gets a
- little 'L' next to it. Pick a spot near the middle of the screen,
- left click, and drag all the way to the left edge. Then move the cursor
- back to the middle, right click, and drag all the way to the right edge.
- You should now have the entire left channel selected.
- - Select "copy". Switch to the new WAV file, and select "paste". Switch
- back to the original.
- - Move the mouse cursor near the bottom of the WAV graphic until the mouse
- pointer gets an 'R' next to it, and select the entire right channel the
- way you did the left.
- - Select "copy". Switch to the new WAV file. From the Edit menu, select
- "Mix paste...".
- - Select "Overlap (Mix)", volume of 100, and check the "Invert" checkbox.
- Click "OK".
-
- GoldWave now includes a "Reduce Vocals" feature. Simply extract the CD
- track into a WAV file and select it from the Effects menu.
-
- The result is a single track with the center channel removed. Hit the
- "play" button and see what it sounds like.
-
- The converse operation -- extracting the vocals and deleting the music --
- is not currently possible. (If you express the situation mathematically,
- the problem is one of three variables in two equations. The software
- needs a new feature that subtracts tracks and retains the other part.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-2-2] How do I encode a CD track to MP3?
- (2003/08/11)
-
- Extract the audio from the CD, then encode it into an MP3 at a quality level
- you like. Some programs combine the "rip" and "encode" into one easy step.
-
- Higher quality settings result in larger MP3 files. Most people can't
- tell the difference between an MP3 at 160Kbps and the original.
-
- Some tutorial sites:
- - http://www.chrismyden.com/DAE/
- - http://www.cdpage.com/Compact_Disc_Consulting/Tutorial/mp3.html
- - http://www.mp3-faq.org/
- - http://help.mp3.com/help/article/wav_to_mp3.html
-
- Some software sites (mostly for Windows):
- - Apple iTunes, http://www.apple.com/
- - MusicMatch Jukebox, http://www.musicmatch.com/
- - Xing AudioCatalyst, http://www.xingtech.com/
- - Real Jukebox, http://www.real.com/jukebox/
- - LAME, http://lame.sourceforge.net/
- - BladeEnc, http://bladeenc.mp3.no/
-
- There are others. The quality of the result depends greatly on the quality
- of the encoder. There is no "best" encoder, but the Fraunhofer codec
- and the LAME and Blade encoders usually do well. ("Codec" is short for
- "encoder/decoder".)
-
- If your MP3s have a static sound in them, you might be getting a bad "rip".
- The all-in-one rip+encode programs don't always do a great job extracting
- audio from the CD. You may want to "rip" the audio manually with EAC
- (6-2-12) and then encode the WAV files. (Recent versions of EAC can
- extract to MP3 if you have a codec installed.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-3] How do I get rid of hisses and clicks on audio CDs?
- (2002/02/25)
-
- If you're interested in removing noise from audio captured from an analog
- source, such as a record player or analog cassette tape, skip to section
- (3-12-3). This section is about unexpected noise in audio from digital
- sources, such as tracks extracted from a CD. (Start with section (3-2)
- if you are new to "ripping" or copying audio tracks.)
-
- The single most important rule of noise removal is to figure out where the
- noise came from. Play the .WAV files off of your hard drive (if you're
- doing direct CD-to-CD copies, extract a track and listen to it). If you
- hear noise in the .WAV on your hard drive, the digital audio extraction
- isn't working very well. You either need to extract more slowly, extract
- from a different device, find a program that works better, or maybe just
- clean the dust and grime off the source CD. For more information, including
- a URL for recommended software and the CD-DA FAQ, see section (3-2).
-
- Always start by inspecting the CD. If you borrowed it from a library,
- don't expect it to be in pristine condition. With enough abuse, even CDs
- will sound bad, and audio *extraction* is more susceptible to such errors
- than audio *playback*. (This is what makes copy-protected CDs possible;
- see section (2-4-2).)
-
- If the problem sounds like repeated or skipped samples, rather than clicks
- or hissing, the problem is probably jitter during extraction. See section
- (2-15) for an overview, and then give EAC a try (section (6-2-12)).
-
- A nifty trick for comparing two .WAV files is to use the "Mix Paste"
- feature of an audio editor like Cool Edit. Extract a track twice, then
- use Mix Paste to copy an inverted version of one file on top of the other.
- The two sound files will cancel each other out wherever they are identical,
- and have little spikes where they are different. This can be useful
- for seeing if the problems are only on one channel or are happening at
- regular intervals. You need to make sure though that both files start at
- the same place though. If your CD-ROM drive doesn't always extract from
- the start of the block, you will need to adjust the files so they line up.
-
- Useful things to do with this include comparing two extractions from the
- same drive, extractions from different drives, or extractions from the CD-R
- you just wrote to the original .WAV file you used to write it.
-
- If you just want to see if the files are the same, use the DOS File Compare
- command, with the "binary" switch set: FC /B FILE1.WAV FILE2.WAV.
-
- Some CD-ROM drives may put a click a few seconds into the first track being
- extracted. This appears to be related to the drive spinning up. Try
- starting the extraction, cancelling, and then immediately restarting.
-
- It is possible, though still somewhat unlikely, that you are trying to
- extract from a copy-protected CD. Section (2-4-2) discusses this in
- some detail.
-
- The rest of this section only applies if the extracted audio sounds fine on
- disk, but has problems when played back from the CD-R.
-
-
- If you're using track-at-once recording, you may get a short click or
- silent "hiccup" at the start of each track. Hiccups are unavoidable, but
- you should be able to get rid of the click by using different software.
-
- If you're using disc-at-once recording, and are still getting a short click
- at the *start* of every track, then your recording software is probably
- writing the sound file with the headers still on it. You should either
- use a smarter program, or remove the header manually (see the URL for
- "StripWav", below).
-
- If you are getting clicks in the middle of a track, they are either being
- added when pulling the data off the disc or when writing it. If the .WAV
- (AIFF on the Mac) file plays without clicks, then your CD recorder may be
- failing somehow during the write process. Some people who got "static"
- in audio recorded on an HP 4020i found that reducing the DMA transfer
- rate to 2MB/sec helped.
-
- One user was told by Yamaha tech support that crackling (similar to a dirty
- vinyl LP) was a symptom of laser misalignment. If you've been writing audio
- CDs for quite a while, but lately you've been getting "crackly" results from
- tried-and-true media, this might be the culprit. Since it requires returning
- the unit for repair, you should exhaust all other possibilities first.
- (Side note: it's not clear how a laser gets "misaligned". They have to
- adjust themselves constantly to stay in the spiral groove. It might be
- due to poor focus, but that should be causing all kinds of problems.)
-
- If you are getting clicks at the end of a track, it's possible that the
- software used to create the .WAV file put some information at the very end,
- which is legal but not handled correctly by some CD-R software. See
- section (3-12-3) for tips on using Cool Edit to remove the data. If you are
- finding that tracks extracted from CDs don't have clicks but tracks that
- you have recorded or edited do, chances are the data size isn't a multiple
- of 2352 bytes, and the last block is being filled with junk. This is
- common on live recordings or when large tracks are cut into smaller ones.
- Jeff Arnold's DAO will fill out the last block with zeros (digital silence)
- if there is space left over, but most of the other programs will write
- garbage that is audible as a short (less than 1/75th second) click. The
- fix is to split the track on 2352-byte block boundaries.
-
- A program called "StripWav" will remove .WAV headers and footers that
- may be interfering with some applications. The program is available from
- http://www.lightlink.com/tjweber/.
-
-
- If you must use track-at-once, make sure you're writing it all in one
- session. PC-based CD players may be able to see tracks in later sessions,
- but the CD player in your stereo system almost certainly can't.
-
- A distantly related problem can arise if you use "shuffle play" to play
- random tracks from a CD-R. If the audio of track N begins immediately,
- some CD players will slide from the end of track N-1 into the start of
- track N, playing a short burst of track N before seeking elsewhere. This
- can be avoided by putting a gap at the start of such tracks (e.g. with
- "INDEX 01 xx:yy:zz" in a DAO cue sheet).
-
-
- Subject: [3-4] How do I copy game console discs (e.g. Playstation, Dreamcast)
- (2002/05/10)
-
- For PCs, CloneCD (6-1-49) or CDRWIN (6-1-7) should work as well as anything.
- For Macs, Astarte's CD-Copy (6-2-8) used to be recommended but may no
- longer be available.
-
- Note that the software does NOT defeat the copy protection. I'm told
- that the "copy protection" on Playstation discs is in fact a region code
- -- America, Europe, Japan -- encoded near the start of the disc. The "MOD
- chip", a device attached to the Playstation that defeats one aspect of the
- copy protection, emulates the country code reading process. It sends all
- three region codes back, enabling the game console to play original discs
- from other regions as well as copied discs. Some people say the code is
- written in a block with damaged ECC, some say it's in the barcode on the
- hub, others have insisted that it's in the ATIP region of the lead-in.
- Whatever the case, it doesn't get copied by a CD recorder, and claims of
- hacked recorder firmware that can create MOD-chip-free duplicates are false.
-
- Instructions for copying discs and vendors who sell MOD chips can be found
- by searching the net. If you don't have a PC, or if your drive doesn't
- support disc-at-once recording, you will need to look for disc copying
- instructions on the net.
-
- Sega Dreamcast discs use a proprietary format, called GD-ROM, which can
- hold 1GB of data. This makes it impossible to make an exact copy, though
- it is possible in many cases to copy "enough" stuff to make them work.
- Persistent rumors claiming that CeQuadrat's PacketCD can copy the discs
- are false. GD-R (Gigabyte Disc Recordable) media has two regions, a
- "single-density" area near the hub and a "high-density" area farther out.
- A visual inspection of GD-R media suggests that the single-density area
- starts at about 22mm from the disc's center (same as a CD-R) and goes
- to 29mm. From 29mm to 31mm is a "no-mans" land that isn't recordable,
- and the high-density area goes from 31mm to 58mm. An image of one is
- available on http://www.fadden.com/cdrpics/.
-
- Incidentally, posting requests or advertisements for pirated software on
- one of the non-warez Usenet groups is generally regarded as a mark of
- extreme stupidity. Whatever your opinion of software piracy, it is against
- the law in much of the world.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5] How do I get long filenames onto a disc?
- (2002/05/19)
-
- There are several different ways, most of which only work with some
- operating systems. The next few sections discuss the various methods.
- See http://www.roxio.com/en/support/cdr/filesystems.html for a compatibility
- chart.
-
- It's important to remember that the most common CD filesystem (ISO-9660
- Level 1) only supports eight-character filenames with a three-character
- extension. Longer filenames are added either as an extension to ISO-9660
- (Joliet, Rock Ridge) or a replacement (UDF, HFS). These are discussed
- in the sections below.
-
- Getting mixed-case filenames onto a disc is a similar problem. Burning an
- ISO-9660 disc with lower-case filenames isn't recommended, because some
- systems aren't able to access the files even though they appear in
- directory listings.
-
- "mkhybrid" and recent versions of "mkisofs" (1.12b1 or later), described in
- sections (6-1-32) and (6-1-10), respectively, are able to create CDs that
- have both Joliet and Rock Ridge extensions. "mkhybrid" can create discs
- with Joliet, Rock Ridge, and Mac HFS on the same disc, sharing the same
- file data.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-1] ISO-9660
- (2000/05/12)
-
- Level 1 ISO-9660 defines names to be the familiar 8+3 convention that
- MS-DOS users have suffered through for many years: eight characters for the
- name, a period ("full stop" for those of you in the U.K.), followed by
- three characters for the file type, all in upper case. The only allowed
- characters are A-Z, 0-9, '.', and '_'. There's also a file version number,
- separated from the name by a semicolon, but it's usually ignored.
-
- Files must occupy a contiguous range of sectors. This allows a file to be
- specified with a start block and a count. (Most disk-based filesystems
- require index blocks that list all the blocks used by a file.) The maximum
- directory depth is 8.
-
- Level 2 ISO-9660 allows far more flexibility in filenames, but isn't usable
- on some systems, notably MS-DOS.
-
- Level 3 ISO-9660 allows non-contiguous files, useful if the file was
- written in multiple packets with packet-writing software. Also unavailable
- under MS-DOS. For the Mac, you can add support by installing Joliet
- Volume Access (http://www.tempel.org/joliet/).
-
- Some of the CD creation programs will let you select how closely you want
- the CD to conform to the ISO-9660 standard. For example, Easy-CD Pro 95
- can restrict filenames to be ISO-9660 compliant, or allow the full set
- of valid MS-DOS filenames. (Most systems can handle MS-DOS filenames.)
-
- Incidentally, the ISO-9660 spec requires that all files be displayed in
- alphabetical order, with directories first, no matter how they are recorded
- on the CD-ROM. You can't arrange files on the disc, because the ISO-9660
- reader (e.g. MSCDEX) sorts them before displaying them.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-2] Rock Ridge
- (1998/04/06)
-
- The Rock Ridge extensions to ISO-9660 define a way for UNIX-isms like long
- mixed-case filenames and symbolic links to be supported.
-
- Because it's still an ISO-9660 filesystem, the files can still be read by
- machines that don't support Rock Ridge; they just won't see the long forms
- of the names.
-
- Rock Ridge is supported by UNIX systems. DOS, Windows, and the Mac
- don't currently support it.
-
- Copies of the Rock Ridge standard and System Use Sharing Protocol (SUSP)
- can be found at ftp://ftp.ymi.com/pub/rockridge/. Pay a visit to
- http://makecd.core.de/Rock_Ridge_Amiga_Specific for a description of
- Amiga-specific extensions.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-3] HFS
- (2002/02/25)
-
- HFS is the Hierarchical File System, used by the Macintosh. This is often
- used instead of the ISO-9660 filesystem on Mac CD-ROMs, making the disc
- unusable on systems that don't support HFS.
-
- At present, the systems that can natively read HFS CD-ROMS are Macs, Amigas
- (with AmiCDROM, available from ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/aminet/disk/cdrom/),
- PCs running Linux or OS/2 (with appropriate patches), the Apple IIgs,
- and SGI machines running Irix (they appear as AppleDouble format).
-
- Windows machines can read HFS disks with the appropriate
- software. One example is "Conversions Plus" from Data Viz,
- http://www.dataviz.com/products/conversionsplus/. Another is MacDisk,
- from http://www.macdisk.com/prospen.php3.
-
- Some authoring packages for the Mac and Windows allow the creation of
- "hybrid" CDs that have both an ISO-9660 filesystem and an HFS filesystem.
- Such discs can be used on non-Mac systems, but still have all the file
- attributes (creator type, resource fork) that Mac OS likes.
-
- Apple has defined some ISO-9660 extensions that allow Macintosh files to
- exist with file and creator types on ISO-9660 CD-ROMs. A description of
- the extensions is available as tech note FL 36 from:
- http://developer.apple.com/technotes/fl/fl_36.html
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-4] Joliet
- (2002/06/24)
-
- Microsoft, being Microsoft, created their own standard called "Joliet".
- This is currently supported by Win95 and WinNT. It's useful when doing
- backups from Win95 onto a CD-R, because the disc is still readable as
- ISO-9660 but shows the long filenames under Win95. The limit on Joliet
- filenames is 64 characters. (Some software reportedly allows up to 110.)
-
- The spec can be found at
- http://bmrc.berkeley.edu/people/chaffee/jolspec.html.
-
- Recent versions of Linux (kernel >= 2.0.34 and 2.1.60) have Joliet
- support. Older versions can be patched; for details, see
- http://www-plateau.cs.berkeley.edu/people/chaffee/joliet.html.
-
- To patch Joliet support into OS/2, visit:
- http://service.software.ibm.com/os2ddpak/html/miscellb/os_2warp/updatedc/index.htm
-
- For the Macintosh, use Joliet Volume Access (http://www.tempel.org/joliet/).
-
- Some old Creative CD-ROM drivers have trouble with CD-ROMs that have Joliet
- filenames. You may need an updated copy of sbided95.exe. It used to be
- available from http://www.ctlsg.creaf.com/, but that site no longer exists.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-5] Romeo
- (2001/11/05)
-
- Adaptec's Easy-CD Pro software allowed creation of discs in "Romeo" format.
- Filenames may be up to 128 characters long, which is very useful for certain
- types of files. Sadly, this format never really caught on. NTI's CD-Maker
- software (section (6-1-12)) supports Romeo.
-
- One person reported having trouble reading Romeo-format discs in Win2K,
- others have had no problems.
-
-
- Subject: [3-5-6] ISO/IEC 13346 and ISO/IEC 13490
- (2003/10/14)
-
- These standards were developed to replace ISO-9660. They evolved into
- what is now known as the UDF filesystem format (see section (6-3-1)).
-
- Some older information is at http://www.standards.com/index.html#Standards.
-
-
- Subject: [3-6] How do I use a CD-i disc on a PC?
- (2000/10/24)
-
- Short answer: you don't, unless you have a CD-i add-on board. Even if you
- have a CD reader compatible with the CD-i (Green Book) standard, there are
- still a number of obstacles in your way. The filesystem used isn't
- ISO-9660, and CD-i players are based around a 680x0 CPU and have special
- hardware for video and audio.
-
- Longer answer: it depends on what kind of disc it is, and what you mean
- by "use".
-
- PhotoCD and VideoCD discs are CD-ROM/XA "Bridge Format" discs that play on
- CD-i players as well as dedicated players and computers. These use the
- ISO-9660 file system, and can be read with commonly available PhotoCD
- software and MPEG-1 players.
-
- DigitalVideo discs from Philips manufactured before June, 1994 are in CD-i
- format, not VideoCD format. If your CD-ROM drive supports raw 2352-byte
- sector reads, it's possible to pull tracks off of a Green Book format disc,
- and extract audio or MPEG video data. You can get a CD-i filesystem
- for Windows from http://www.icdia.org/articles/filesystem.html.
-
- VCD PowerPlayer from CyberLink (http://www.cyberlink.com.tw/) can play
- CD-i movies directly off of a Green Book disc.
-
- In-depth information is available from http://www.icdia.org/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-7] How can I extract disc and track titles from an audio CD?
- (1998/09/01)
-
- Typical Red Book audio CDs don't have this information. Software audio CD
- players like those provided by Adaptec or Microsoft require you to type in
- the information, which is then stored in a database on your hard drive.
- The discs are identified by computing a signature based on track offsets
- and other fields. http://www.cddb.com/ acts as an Internet database of
- CD info.
-
- Some newer formats, like CD Extra, allow or even require such information
- to be included on the CD. See Sony's pages at http://www.cdextra.com/.
-
- Some recent CD players are advertised as "CD-Text Ready". These use the
- CD-Text data embedded in the P-W subcode channels to display disc and track
- title data. See section (3-28) for more about CD-Text.
-
-
- Subject: [3-8] How do I write more than 80 minutes of audio or 700MB of data?
- (2004/03/04)
-
- CD-R's have a pre-formed spiral track, and the sector addresses are
- hard-coded into CD-R media, so there's no flexibility. Every disc holds a
- predetermined amount of data.
-
- Most discs rated at 74 or 80 minutes hold slightly more than that.
- How much more depends on the brand of media, batch of media, and perhaps
- even on the recorder used (see section (7-6) for more details on how much
- a CD-R can hold). In some situations you can exceed the stated capacity
- of the disc; see section (3-8-3) below.
-
- Since CDs are written in a spiral, the amount of data you can get on
- a disc is affected by how tightly spaced the "groove" is. A standard
- Red Book audio CD or Yellow Book CD-ROM is designed to allow at most 74
- minutes of data. By using a tighter track pitch on the spiral "groove"
- on the glass master, manufacturers can get more data onto the disc.
- In theory this could make it harder for some CD readers to use the discs.
- See section (3-8-1) for notes on 80-minute discs, and (3-8-2) for 90-
- and 99-minute blanks.
-
- The easiest way to get more data onto a disc is not to try. For audio CDs,
- you can leave off one or two tracks that you're not overly fond of. For
- data CDs you may be able to drop some images or sample data. The most
- common problem people encounter with data CDs is trying to copy them as a
- collection of files rather than doing a bulk copy of the entire disc. See
- also section (3-24).
-
- One user suggested using the "speed up" function of Sound Forge or Cool
- Edit to increase the speed of extracted WAV files by 3%. This supposedly
- gives better results than resampling, and allows writing 77 minutes of
- audio onto a 74-minute disc.
-
- If you have a mono recording, you could double the length of a CD by
- recording half the sound on the left track and half on the right. The
- sound would be recorded as two monaural files, and then merged into a
- single stereo file with a sound editor like Cool Edit. (With Cool Edit
- 96: load first mono file. Use "Convert Sample Type" to convert to
- Stereo. Select the right track, and Delete Selection. Use Mix Paste to
- load the right track from the second file, or just fire up a second copy of
- Cool Edit with the other track, and use Copy and Paste commands.) The
- person playing the CD back will need to use a "balance" knob to select the
- left or right track. One issue with this method is that the track markers
- apply to both tracks, so providing random access to specific sections can
- be tricky.
-
- If you're trying to copy a CD-ROM or VideoCD and running out of room, you
- may have a different problem. See sections (3-24) and (4-25).
-
- Incidentally, don't get confused when you discover you have 700MB of audio
- extracted from a CD that only holds 650MB. Audio sectors use 2352 bytes
- per sector, while standard CD-ROM data uses 2048 (the rest is for error
- correction). You can put roughly 747MB of audio onto a disc that only
- holds 650MB of data.
-
-
- Subject: [3-8-1] How well do 80-minute CD-R blanks work?
- (2004/03/04)
-
- In general, they work just fine. Reports from people who have used
- 80-minute CD-Rs indicate that compatibility with different CD-ROM drives is
- very good. However, bear in mind the following statement, which was sent
- by e-mail from a TDK representative:
-
- "The CD-R80 is a special product developed by TDK to meet the application
- needs of software developers and music studios. To achieve its 80 minute
- recording time, track pitch and scanning velocity specification tolerances
- had to be minimized, reducing the margin of error between drive and media.
- This means limited compatibility between some CD-Recorders and CD-ROM
- Readers. If you intend to use this recording length, please check with
- your hardware manufacturer. Use of the CD-R80 is at one's own risk. No
- guarantees of performance are made by TDK."
-
- Whether it's better to use 80-minute discs or "overburning" (described in
- the next section) is a worthy subject for debate. Both can cause problems
- on different CD-ROM drives, and not all recorders are capable of doing one
- or the other. Because of consumer demand, all recent drives can do both.
-
- An 80-minute disc has roughly 360,000 sectors instead of the 333,000
- defined by the Red Book standard. This increases the CD-ROM capacity
- from 650MB to 703MB.
-
-
- Here's a few personal notes on my experiments with TDK 80-minute "green"
- blanks, back in late 1997. Back then it was hard to find 80-minute
- discs and easy to find 74-minute discs; these days the situation has
- reversed itself. I was able to purchase a small quantity (three discs)
- from Microboards at http://www.microboards.com/. This section is rather
- outdated now, but I'm leaving it in as a historical footnote.
-
- The discs were part number SCWA-ETC80A-X, priced at US$40.00 per disc in
- October 1997. That was about 20x the cost for an extra 8% storage. The
- discs were unbranded. The only difference I could see between these and
- other TDK green discs is that on the hub it says "CD-Recordable 6129B-80".
- Easy CD Creator Deluxe v3 showed 359,624 blocks (702.8MB in MODE-1) on the
- TDK 80-minute blanks, versus 333,010 blocks (650.8MB) available on my
- Mitsui gold 74-minute blanks.
-
- The first challenge was finding software that would work correctly with the
- discs. Neither Easy-CD Pro 95 v1.2 nor Easy CD Creator Deluxe v3.0 would
- allow me to do a test recording with more than 650MB of files. I ended up
- using mkisofs to create an image file with 341,163 blocks (666.3MB) of
- data, composed of two large .AVI files, and three smaller pieces of one of
- the other .AVI files. (With Easy CD Creator Deluxe v3.5 and later, you
- can choose to ignore a warning about the data size.)
-
- Using a Yamaha CDR-102 with v1.0 firmware, the first thing I tried was to
- burn the image file to a 74-minute blank. Easy-CD immediately rejected the
- disc, saying there wasn't enough space. I then put the 80-minute blank in
- and did a test run. Easy-CD Pro 95 had no problems burning the ISO-9660
- image file, until the screen saver activated and McAfee anti-virus "screen
- scan" kicked in. Good thing it was a test burn; I got a buffer underrun.
- I killed the screen saver and virus checker and ran again, had a successful
- test run, and followed it with a successful burn.
-
- To verify the data, I used Easy-CD Pro 95's "compare track" feature. This
- failed, complaining that one track was shorter than the other. My guess is
- that the compare feature has some sort of track length limitation. My next
- attempt was to use the Linux "sum" command to make sure that the disc was
- readable in my Plextor 8Plex. This worked fine, and the output of "sum"
- matched what I got on the 4x CD-ROM drive in the Sun workstation at work.
- I also tried the disc in a Mac 7500 and a Dell Pentium, and had no problems
- with either.
-
- The next step was an 80-minute audio CD, and that's where things fell
- apart. Easy-CD Pro 95 v1.2 didn't work at all (!), Easy CD Creator Deluxe
- v3.0 again refused to allow me to create a long audio CD, and with Jeff
- Arnold's software (both the DOS version and CDRWIN) the test write failed
- after a minute or so (after the lead-in had completed?). Strangely,
- removing the last two tracks from the cue sheet, which reduced it to 72
- minutes, allowed the test write to succeed on both 74-minute and 80-minute
- blanks. It appears that the Yamaha CDR-102 drive is unwilling to write
- that much audio data.
-
-
- Subject: [3-8-2] How well do 90-minute and 99-minute CD-R blanks work?
- (2004/03/04)
-
- Small quantities of 90-minute and 99-minute blanks have appeared, but since
- their introduction in late 2000 they haven't become as commonplace as other
- lengths. Indications are that many recorders and some software don't
- really work with the longer discs.
-
- The discs have capacity of roughly 791MB (90 min) and 870MB (99 min).
- However, all the capacity in the world won't help you if you can't
- read the disc after you write it. If you're interested in larger but
- incompatible discs, your best bet is probably DVD-R. Other alternatives,
- such as DD-R/DD-RW (section (2-37)), ML (section (2-39)), and GigaRec
- (section (2-46)) never really took off.
-
- CD time stamps are two digits (binary coded decimal, in case you were
- wondering), so exceeding 99 minutes isn't possible. You could, in theory,
- declare there to be 99 seconds in a minute and 99 sectors per second, but
- that would break just about everything that tried to read one. The limits
- of the specifications are being pushed at 80 minutes and even harder at 90,
- so don't expect much more out of CD-R. Some knowledgeable individuals have
- stated that the longest possible CD-R is 79 minutes, 59 seconds, 74 blocks
- long, because of the way that the last possible start time of the lead-out
- is encoded, but you can use "overburning" (discussed in the next section)
- to write past that point. (Experiments suggest that the actual limit is
- 88 minutes; either way, you're pretty far from 99.)
-
- See http://www.mmore.com/download/Technical_write-up-MMORE_90_min.pdf for
- a tutorial on burning 90-minute discs with Nero. In short: make sure your
- drive supports overburning, set "Enable overburn" in the "Expert features"
- tab of the preferences, ignore the warnings, and cross your fingers.
- Always verify the disc afterward.
-
-
- Subject: [3-8-3] How can I exceed the stated disc capacity ("overburning")?
- (1999/10/10)
-
- The capacity of a CD-R is calculated to allow enough space to hold at least
- 74 minutes of Red Book audio data and 90 seconds of digital silence. The
- silent area is called the "lead-out", and is included so that a CD player
- will realize that it has reached the end of the disc, especially when
- fast-forwarding.
-
- When a recording program tells you the exact capacity of the disc, it's not
- including the area reserved for the lead-out. There's nothing magic about
- this reserved area though. With the right kind of setup -- and a
- willingness to accept write failures as a matter of course -- you can put
- data into the reserved area, and possibly into a few blocks past the end
- of it. This is often referred to as "overburning" a disc.
-
- How much more you can fit depends almost entirely on the media. Some
- brands will hold as much as 78 minutes, but it varies from batch to batch.
- You can use Feurio! (section (6-1-42)) to compute the maximum size of a
- specific disc without actually writing anything on it.
-
- You also need the right recorder and the right software. The Teac CD-R55S,
- Plextor PX-R412C, Yamaha 4xx/4xxx, and Memorex/Dysan CRW-1622 units have
- been used to write "extra long" audio discs successfully. The Philips
- 36xx, HP 71xx, and Ricoh 62xx units don't seem to be willing to do so. In
- some cases, getting the firmware revision may be important. A recorder
- that isn't able to do this sort of writing will usually reject the cue
- sheet before writing begins.
-
- To write such a disc, you need to use a program that won't refuse to exceed
- the disc capacity. Easy CD Creator, in an attempt to prevent you from
- making mistakes, will refuse to allow you to write more than you should be
- able to. CDRWIN will warn you that the write may fail, but will allow you
- to continue anyway. Nero has a preference (under Expert Features) called
- "enable oversize disc" that allows the longer write.
-
- One approach to determining the maximum disc length is to gather a large
- collection of audio tracks, and start writing. Eventually the recorder
- will attempt to write past the end of the disc, and the write process will
- fail. Now play the disc, preferrably in a player that shows the total
- elapsed time for the entire disc. When the music cuts off, make a note of
- the time. That's the absolute capacity of the disc.
-
- Most (all?) CD players will display the total disc time when you first
- put the disc in. This value represents how much you tried to write,
- not how much was actually written. If you want to impress your friends,
- try to write 88 minutes of music. You won't get anywhere near that far
- on 74-minute media, but the CD player will show it.
-
- It should be possible to write a CD-ROM in the same manner as an audio CD,
- but the space would have to be calculated so that the write failure
- occurred when the lead-out was being written. Otherwise, some of the files
- that appeared to be on the disc wouldn't actually exist.
-
- Recording in DAO mode may be helpful to ensure that the lead-in gets
- written. Without a table of contents, the disc is useless. It's very
- likely however that you will be able to finalize the disc even after the
- write fails.
-
- Depending on the disc and your player, you may have trouble seeking out to
- tracks near the end of the disc. Also, your CD player may behave strangely
- when it walks off the end of the disc: one user said he had to open and
- close the player afterward to convince it that a disc was still loaded.
-
- The disc surface past the end of the area reserved for the leadout may be
- unreliable. Attempting to use more than 90 seconds (about 15MB of MODE-1
- data) beyond the rated capacity of a disc could be asking for trouble.
-
- It's possible to perform similar tricks on 80-minute media. Experiments
- with TDK 80-minute discs resulted in a recorded length of 82:09. MMC
- recorders don't seem to like having the lead-out position any later than
- 88:29:74, but that shouldn't get in the way.
-
- Further commentary and instructions can be found at
- http://www.cdmediaworld.com/ under "OverSize / OverBurn CD-Rs", including
- a list of recorders that are known to work and step-by-step instructions
- for using popular software.
-
-
- Subject: [3-9] How do I put photographs onto CD-ROM?
- (1999/03/31)
-
- The first thing you have to do is get them onto your computer. There are
- three basic approaches: use a scanner to convert printed photographs, use a
- video digitizer to pull images off of a video tape, or use a digital camera
- to take pictures that can be transferred directly.
-
- There are a great many different scanners, with different resolutions and
- capabilities. http://www.zdnet.com/special/filters/sc/scanner/ is a
- fair place to start. (If the link doesn't work, go to zdnet.com and
- look for reviews of scanners.)
-
- Video digitizers are mentioned in section (3-16). If you're scanning off
- of VHS video tape, you are going to get disappointing results.
-
- Digital cameras will generally give you the best results. A mid-range
- digital camera will give you pictures that look as good (when printed on a
- photo-quality printer, which are inexpensive now) as a 35mm point-and-shoot
- film camera. A few links:
-
- - http://www.steves-digicams.com/
- - http://www.imaging-resource.com/
- - http://www.dcresource.com/
-
- Once you have the photograph on your hard drive, you may want to touch it
- up a bit. You can use software to correct for over- and under-exposed
- snapshots, remove "red eye", and crop off bits that weren't supposed to be
- in the frame. Cameras and scanners should come with image manipulation
- software that will help you manipulate and manage the images. Adobe's
- PhotoShop (http://www.adobe.com/) is the standard high-end solution, and
- their PhotoDeluxe Home Edition may appeal to a less demanding crowd.
-
- Once you've got the images in a reasonable state, save them in a widely
- accepted format such as JPEG or TIFF, and write them to a CD-ROM like you
- would any other files. You may need to use an "Export" function rather
- than "Save As...", because consumer photo software authors tend to use
- proprietary image formats as the default.
-
- If you want to create a PhotoCD that can be played in a PhotoCD player,
- continue on to the next section. If you're interested in arranging the
- pictures into an album, see (3-9-2).
-
-
- Subject: [3-9-1] How do I create a PhotoCD?
- (1999/03/31)
-
- First off, you need to be aware that certain aspects of PhotoCD creation
- are proprietary to Kodak. Programs like Roxio's Easy CD Creator will
- allow you to create CD-ROMs with PhotoCD image files, and you will be able
- to view the images with Mac or PC programs that understand the PhotoCD file
- format, but you won't be able to look at the disc with a PhotoCD player.
-
- http://www.kodak.com/country/US/en/corp/pressReleases/pr19950328-10.shtml
- has the glossy brochure information, with some Kodak contact information.
- The Build-It and Arrange-It software, which allow you to create "real"
- PhotoCDs, costs about US$450. Kodak apparently pulled the software from
- the market in December 1997, so it may be difficult to find.
-
- http://www.shiresoft.com/ gives you step-by-step instructions and software
- for creating "real" PhotoCD discs with Kodak's software. The Build-It
- program will only write to Kodak CD recorders, but a translator available
- from this web site will allow it to work with GEAR or CDRWIN. Follow the
- Kodak links on that page.
-
- There are some utilities that will convert images into PCD format, but they
- only support the uncompressed base resolutions. The higher resolutions are
- compressed with an algorithm proprietary to Kodak.
-
-
- Subject: [3-9-2] How can I set up a photo album on CD-ROM?
- (1999/12/18)
-
- There are programs available that will do this for you, or you can take
- a "do it yourself" approach. Some examples:
-
- Roxio "Photo Relay" (part of Easy CD Creator Deluxe Edition - see
- section (6-1-26)). According to their web page, it "lets you organize
- digitized photos and videos, then create Slide Shows, Web Albums and Video
- Postcards that can be stored to CD and shared with others - no proprietary
- viewer is required by the recipient!".
-
- Cerious "Thumb's Plus" (http://www.cerious.com/). Helps you organize
- images and create slide shows. Free evaluation version.
-
- Firehand "Lightning" (http://www.firehand.com/lightning/). Photo albums,
- slide shows, screen savers. Free evaluation version.
-
- Tlonstruct "CDView Pro" (http://tlonstruct.com/). Fancy picture viewer.
- Free shareware download.
-
- G&A Imaging "PhotoRecall" (http://www.ga-imaging.com/). Commercial
- program with lots of features.
-
- InMedia "Slides & Sounds" (http://www.inmediapresents.com/slideshows.html).
- Create fancy presentations. Demo available.
-
- Extensis "Portfolio" (http://www.extensis.com/portfolio/). Heavy-duty
- software for "media asset management". Supports every file format you've
- ever heard of, and has support for hybrid CD recording.
-
- The do-it-yourself approach. Make an HTML page with pictures, using a
- program like Microsoft FrontPage to create thumbnails (the auto-thumbnail
- feature is *very* handy), so that when you click on the thumbnail image you
- get the full-sized image. Put the HTML page and all of the graphics onto a
- CD-ROM, and view the pictures with a web browser. For bonus points you can
- use "shellout" with autorun.inf (section (3-21)) to have Windows
- automatically launch the default web browser when the disc is inserted, and
- "mkhybrid" to create a disc with long filenames and correct file types for
- Rock Ridge, Joliet, and MacOS.
-
- The "Film Factory" software that comes with some Epson printers has an
- "export to web page" function that works pretty well. The "lite" version
- that comes with their greeting card paper may or may not support this
- feature.
-
-
- Subject: [3-9-3] How can I show digital photos on my DVD player?
- (2002/12/09)
-
- The easiest way is to use a program that does it for you. Ulead's "DVD
- PictureShow" will create VideoCD or DVD discs with your photos on them.
- More information is available at http://www.ulead.com/. A similar
- product is PictureToTV from http://www.picturetotv.com/.
-
- The first step is to make sure your DVD player can play CD-R media.
- Create an audio CD on CD-R media, put it into your DVD player, and try to
- play it. If it works, great. If it doesn't, try the experiment again,
- this time with CD-RW media. If neither works, or CD-R doesn't work and
- you can't record CD-RW discs, you're out of luck. See section (2-13) for
- more about DVD players and compatibility.
-
- The next step is to find a way to display the photos. Some DVD players can
- display PhotoCD discs, but there isn't a way to create "real" PhotoCD discs
- with currently available software (see section (3-9-1)).
-
- The alternative is to create a VideoCD with still frames. Each still frame
- is a medium sized (704x480 in NTSC) JPEG image. By gathering these into a
- collection, you can create a VideoCD "slide show" that will play on most
- DVD players. Be careful though: a fair percentage of DVD players do not
- support VideoCD. You should be able to figure this out by looking through
- the manual. If no reference to VideoCD can be found, you'll just have to
- try it and see.
-
- See section (3-16-1) for more about VideoCD.
-
- The MPV (MultiPhoto/Video) specification was announced in November 2002.
- It's purpose is to define a standard way of storing pictures, videos,
- and audio on digital media. This should allow you to create discs with
- multimedia content easily and display them on compatible DVD players.
- See http://www.osta.org/mpv/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-10] How do I make a CD that will work on a PC or a Mac?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- [ Moved to section (3-35). ]
-
-
- Subject: [3-11] How do I access different sessions on a multi-session CD?
- (2004/01/12)
-
- As always, it depends.
-
- MS-DOS lets you see the first data session. Usually. Win95 lets you see
- the last data session. Usually. Roxio's Session Selector and Ahead's
- MultiMounter will let you choose which session you see.
-
- Some CD creation software (e.g. Roxio Easy CD Creator) writes a complete
- table of contents in each session, some of which refers back to the files
- from the previous session, allowing a form of incremental backup. (This
- will work for ISO-9660 discs, but won't work for HFS. However, this is
- less painful than it seems because a properly-configured Macintosh will let
- you mount all the sessions as individual volumes.)
-
- Software like Nero or Easy CD Creator will allow you to combine the
- contents of several previous sessions by creating a new session (load the
- file/directory info from more than one session, then write and close a
- new session with that directory structure).
-
- For some older systems your success with multi-session discs may depend on
- the SCSI or CD-ROM driver you have installed. It's reasonable to expect
- a disc with two sessions to be treated the same way on just about every
- system, but once you go past two it's unwise to expect consistent behavior.
-
- If you just can't seem to find your files, you can use IsoBuster
- (http://www.isobuster.com/) to access the data manually.
-
-
- Subject: [3-12] How do I transfer my records or cassettes to a CD?
- (2001/05/29)
-
- Conversion of cassette tapes and vinyl records is increasingly popular.
- Common reasons range from plans for long-term preservation to a desire
- to listen to old favorites while driving in a car without a tape player.
-
- There are two basic kinds of CD recorders: those that attach to a computer,
- and those that stand alone. The latter, described in detail in section
- (5-12), are usually connected to a stereo system. They are easier to work
- with, but less flexible.
-
- The first step, regardless of equipment, is figuring out how to physically
- connect your tape player, turntable, or wax cylinder player to something
- else. You almost always want "line-level" sound. The output from a
- turntable is typically not line-level, so it has to be connected to a
- receiver or pre-amplifier "phono" input. You then use the outputs from
- the receiver or amplifier; if you can find outputs labeled "tape out" or
- "preamp out", use those.
-
- (A pre-amplifier raises the voltage level from the phono cartridge up to
- "line level" voltage. An amplifier increases the signal from line level
- to whatever is needed for your speakers. A pre-amplifier will also
- compensate for pre-emphasis in the recorded material.)
-
- You could connect your recorder to the headphone jack on the receiver or
- amplifier, but that's not the best way to go. The voltage level coming
- out of the headphone jack varies on the volume setting, while line-level
- output doesn't. This makes line-level easier to set up. If all you can
- find is a headphone jack, you will have to fiddle with the volume control
- until the sound is as loud as possible without "clipping". If one of your
- devices has little colored bars that bounce up and down according to how
- loud the sound is, you need to play something "loud" on your tape player
- or turntable, and adjust the volume until the loudest parts rise up just
- shy of the maximum.
-
- Connect the output from your tape player, receiver, or amplifier into
- the CD recorder (if you have a stand-alone model) or the "line in" on the
- sound card on your computer (if you're using that). Continue with section
- (3-12-1) if you have a stand-alone model, section (3-12-2) if yours is
- attached to a computer.
-
-
- You can find odd bits of hardware that will play or enhance playback of
- older recording formats (78's, LP's, 16" Radio Transcriptions) at Nauck's
- Vintage Records (http://www.78rpm.com/).
-
- For those of you wondering what the deal with pre-emphasis is, this
- little tidbit is courtesy Mike Richter:
-
- "Preemphasis has been used since the earliest days of commercial recording.
- In general, the high-frequency content of the music (or whatever) being
- recorded is low and the noise is high. Therefore, treble was boosted and
- lows were cut by a preemphasis curve which was removed in playback. The
- standard RIAA curve for turnover and rolloff (the amount and frequency
- for treble and bass, respectively) was not accepted universally until the
- 50's, and some fine preamps offered selectable values with presets for
- the common curves into the early transistor era."
-
-
- Subject: [3-12-1] ...with a stand-alone audio CD recorder?
- (2000/12/02)
-
- Once you've got everything hooked up, hit "record" on the CD recorder
- and "play" on the other device. Wait a while. You're done.
-
- You may want to fiddle with it to mark the start individual tracks. See
- the instructions that came with your recorder.
-
-
- Subject: [3-12-2] ...with a CD recorder attached to my computer?
- (2003/05/23)
-
- Recording into a PC is a little trickier, but you have much more
- control over the final result. It's easy to edit away silence and
- reduce or remove clicks and hissing.
-
- In addition to the material here, you may want to read one or more of
- these tutorials:
-
- http://www.blazeaudio.com/howto/lp-overview.html
- http://www.delback.co.uk/lp-cdr.htm
- http://www.ganymede.hemscott.net/tutorial.htm
- http://www.gmayor.dsl.pipex.com/copy_vinyl_to_CDR.htm
- http://www.pcabusers.net/vinyllp/vinyllp.htm
-
- The page at http://www.octave.com/library/audiocd.html is also useful.
-
-
- The most crucial component is the sound card. The sound card converts the
- audio signal from analog to digital (an "A/D conversion"). Some cards do
- this conversion better than others. You can use the A/D converter built
- into a sound card like a SoundBlaster 16, but the sound quality will not
- be very good. The sound cards from Turtle Beach (Tropez, Tahiti) and
- CrystaLake are a step up, and a Digital Audio Labs CardD+ is about as good
- as it gets for internal A/D cards. If you're really serious, you should get
- an external A/D converter like the Symetrix 620 or the Lucid AD9624 and feed
- the digital output from that into the computer. (Looks like the Lucid device
- has superseded the Symetrix one -- it's the same company. Relevant URLs
- are http://www.symetrixaudio.com/ and http://www.lucidtechnology.com/.)
- Other products can be found at http://www.midiman.com/.
-
- Another way of accomplishing the same thing is to record to an audio DAT
- deck and then use the digital output on the DAT recorder; see section (3-13)
- for details. With some decks, such as the TASCAM DA-20 mkII and DA-302,
- it's not even necessary to record to tape. You can play straight through
- the recorder.
-
- A problem with some sound cards (really cheap Opti and ESS cards have been
- named) is that the crystal that controls the recording sample rate is off.
- If the card doesn't do the sampling at the correct rate, the recorded audio
- may end up slightly slower or faster than the original. This will become
- apparent when the sound is played back off of a CD or through a better
- sound card. Most sounds cards don't have this problem.
-
- If you have questions or need a recommendation on a sound card, you might
- want to try:
-
- news:rec.audio.tech
- news:comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.tech
-
- Some highly technical benchmark evaluations of cards are available at
- http://www.rockpark.com/soundcards/ and http://www.pcavtech.com/.
-
- Roxio's Easy CD Creator (section (6-1-26)) includes an application called
- "Spin Doctor" that performs most of the tasks needed to transfer LPs to CD.
- Depending on your needs, it may provide a simple all-in-one solution.
-
- A simpler approach is to use a program capable of recording large amounts
- of audio from the sound card. An editor such as Cool Edit or GoldWave
- should work. Whatever you choose, you should again play a loud passage and
- watch the "VU meter" display to make sure you're getting as much signal as
- you can without clipping. If the little colored bars are slamming against
- the top, you're clipping. The Windows volume control panel (double-click
- on the yellow speaker icon in the lower-right-hand corner) has a VU meter
- in it, and allows you to set the input gain.
-
- Configure the application to record 44.1KHz 16-bit stereo sound, click
- "record", hit "play" on your tape player or turntable, and wait a while.
- When the music is done, stop the recording on the computer. You can
- either record the result directly to a CD, or clean it up a bit first.
- See the next section for some suggestions.
-
- Bear in mind that CD-quality audio uses up about 10MB of disk space per
- minute, so one side of a 45-minute tape will require roughly 450MB. Make
- sure you have enough disk space before you start.
-
-
- Subject: [3-12-3] How can I clean up the audio before recording?
- (2000/12/02)
-
- There are a variety of programs that can automatically remove pops, clicks,
- and hissing from digitized audio. Few automated tools can do as good a job
- cleaning up pops and other noise as an experienced person, however. If you
- want to perform the transfer by hand, the following method has been
- suggested for PC users with Cool Edit:
-
- - Record directly into Cool Edit, using the highest possible input
- level that doesn't exceed the maximum. You want to record 16-bit
- stereo samples at 44.1KHz.
- - In the "noise reduction" dialog, set FFT size to 8192, FFT precision
- to 10, and #of samples to 96.
- - Select a silent passage between songs or from the end of the record.
- It can have some crackling but no huge pops. Set the noise level.
- - Select the entire track and perform noise reduction at about 70%.
- - Select the entire track and normalize it.
- - Manually remove any big pops (easily located by zooming in to the general
- area and switching to "spectral view" in the edit menu) by zooming in on
- them and amplifying them to about 8%. You only need to select the
- channel (left or right) in which the offending data occurs. If it occurs
- across BOTH channels, you may get a better result by deleting that part
- of the track and reconstructing it in such a way that it remains
- smooth... if that's not possible, make one channel smooth and then
- amplify the other to 8%.
-
- Cool Edit optionally leaves a blob of data at the end of the .WAV file,
- which is legal in the file format but not expected by some utilities. To
- avoid this, make sure the "Save extra non-audio information" box isn't
- checked.
-
- Software that may come in handy:
-
- GoldWave
- http://www.goldwave.com/, a good audio editor (shareware).
- Adobe Audition (formerly Syntrillium Cool Edit)
- http://www.adobe.com/, fancy commercial audio editor.
- Sound Forge
- http://www.sonicfoundry.com/, fancy commercial product with
- lots of plug-ins.
- Clean! plus
- http://www.steinberg.net/products/, designed for vinyl and tape xfers.
- Algorithmix
- http://www.algorithmix.com/, has a noise reduction program called
- SoundLaundry.
- DART and DART PRO
- http://www.dartpro.com/, designed for audio restoration ("click
- removal" and more).
- DCart
- http://www.diamondcut.com/, audio restoration.
- Pristine Sounds 2000
- http://www.alienconnections.com/, audio restoration.
- Gnome Wave Cleaner
- http://gwc.sourceforge.net/, audio cleanup under Linux.
- Waves software (various)
- http://www.waves.com/, fancy (and expensive) audio manipulation.
- CD Wave
- http://www.cdwave.com/, useful for splitting a single large WAV
- file on track boundaries.
- RIP Vinyl
- http://www.ripvinyl.com/, similar to CD Wave.
-
- Wave Repair, from http://www.waverepair.com/, is a WAV editor designed with
- analog recording and click-fixing in mind. It's aimed at very flexible
- manual repair with some helpful automation. If you'd like something
- a little heavier on automation and a little lighter on manual control,
- try Wave Corrector at http://www.ganymede.hemscott.net/wavecor.htm.
-
- Don't forget that CD audio is 16-bit PCM stereo samples at 44.1KHz, and
- will chew up disk space at roughly 176K per second. Playing back large
- sound files is difficult with simple-minded applications like the standard
- Win95 sound player, because they try to load the entire file into memory
- all at once. Windows Media Player should work fine. (Section (4-20)
- has some other suggestions on this same topic.)
-
- See section (3-3) for some tips on avoiding clicks when committing the
- audio to CD.
-
- If, for some reason, you'd like to record "live" to the CD-R instead of
- recording to the hard drive first, see section (3-54).
-
-
- Subject: [3-13] How do I transfer an audio DAT tape to CD?
- (2003/01/13)
-
- Buy a card that will allow you to go from DAT to hard disk digitally. Make
- sure you get one that can handle the same digital standard the DAT recorder
- uses, i.e. S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface Format, sometimes
- referred to as "domestic") or AES/EBU ("professional").
-
- Some of the solutions for the PC are:
- - DigiDesign AudioMedia - http://www.digidesign.com/
- - Zefiro Acoustics ZA2 - http://www.zefiro.com/
- - AdB Digital Multiwav Pro - http://www.adbdigital.com/
- - Digital Audio Labs CardD+ - http://www.digitalaudio.com/products.htm
- - Turtle Beach Fiji - http://www.tbeach.com/products/fiji.htm
-
- The CardD+ comes highly recommended. There may be newer versions of these
- products, so be sure to check out the web sites.
-
- Visit http://www.digitalexperience.com/cards.html for a feature comparison
- of many different models.
-
- An inexpensive S/PDIF card available from Computer Geeks
- (http://www.compgeeks.com/) was evaluated by some newsgroup readers in
- mid-1998. Apparently there were some problems with the physical dimensions
- of the card (too wide for some PC slots), the documentation is poor, and
- the voltage level for both input and output was TTL instead of standard
- S/PDIF. You're probably better off with one of the established brands
- unless you're sure about what you need.
-
- You should record from the DAT onto your hard drive, and then record the CD
- from there. If you try to record directly from DAT you'll likely end up
- with a lot of wasted CD-Rs due to buffer underruns or minor mistakes. You
- should use Disc-At-Once recording for best results.
-
- One issue you need to be aware of is that some older DAT recorders can
- only record at 48KHz, while CDs are recorded at 44.1KHz. If this is the
- case with your equipment, you will have to do a sample rate conversion.
- The DSP on cards like the ZA2 will do this for you, or you can use an
- audio editing program like GoldWave or Sound Forge.
-
- There *are* CD-R drives that have analog inputs, and can record directly
- from audio sources. See section (5-12).
-
- If you use a DAT and haven't been to the DAT-heads home page, you should
- definitely check out http://www.atd.ucar.edu/rdp/dat-heads/.
-
- If you want to manipulate audio DATs directly from your computer,
- you need a DDS drive with special firmware. The SCSI DDS drives
- that are typically sold for backups don't have the firmware required
- to handle DAT tapes. Most SGI workstations can do this, and Mac
- users should check out http://www.demon.co.uk/gallery/StudioDAT.html
- [link dead?]. If you have an Archive Python DDS drive, check out
- http://www4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/~eckert/. Reputable Systems
- (http://www.reputable.com/) sells DDS-2 drives with SGI firmware,
- Archive/Conner/Seagate model CTD-8000HS.
-
- Some other drives can be supported with appropriate firmware updates. See
- http://www.trygve.com/playaudiodat.html.
-
- An interesting combination of technologies is the DAT-Link, formerly
- available from http://www.tc.com/. It connects to the digital connectors
- on the DAT machine (or MD, DCC, or CD player) and the SCSI interface on
- a computer. The device can be controlled from other computers on a network.
-
- If you're interested in mastering production audio CDs, you should take
- a look at http://www.sadie.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-14] How do I put audio and data on the same CD?
- (2001/01/10)
-
- There are two ways to do this. The first is to put the data on track 1 of
- the CD, and audio on the next several tracks (discs created this way are
- referred to as "mixed-mode" CDs). The CD-ROM drive will automatically look
- at track 1 and ignore all other tracks, so you'll be able to get at the
- data and -- depending on the operating system -- will be able to play the
- audio tracks. Remember that all of the tracks, both audio and data, need
- to be recorded in a single session. See section (3-2).
-
- The down side of this is that audio CD players may attempt to play track 1,
- which can be obnoxious or downright harmful to audio equipment. Most
- modern CD players are smart enough to ignore data tracks, so this won't
- usually be a problem.
-
- The other approach is to create a multisession disc with the audio tracks
- in the first session and the data track in the second. This is how CD
- Extra (the format formerly known as CD Plus) works. Audio CD players only
- look at the first session, and CD-ROM drives are (supposed to) start with
- the last session, so it all works out. Sony Music has some pages at
- http://www.cdextra.com/.
-
- (NOTE: it appears that in some situations a Macintosh will not handle
- multi-session audio/data CD-R discs correctly. For example, a G3 with a
- DVD-ROM drive running Mac OS 8.6 works fine, but a G4 or iMac running Mac OS
- 9 will reject the disc as unreadable. The same system will handle pressed
- discs correctly -- only CD-Rs fail. The reason for this is uncertain,
- but it may be possible to work around it by disabling the system's audio
- CD extension when you want to read the data portion.)
-
- A common question is how to write the audio in the first session without
- gaps between tracks, because you can't use disc-at-once recording.
- (If you did use DAO recording, the disc would be closed, and you wouldn't
- be able to write the data track). With the right hardware and software,
- you can do "session-at-once" recording to write the audio without gaps.
- For example, if you're recording with Nero and SAO-capable hardware,
- you just select disc-at-once mode but don't select "finalize CD".
-
- What happens when you try to play one of these as audio in your CD-ROM
- drive? As with most things multisession, it depends on your drive. (The
- player that comes with Plextor CD-ROM drives does the right thing. If
- you're using a different drive, you're on your own.)
-
-
- There's actually a third way to do this that involves putting the data
- track into the extended pregap of the first audio track. Instead of the
- audio starting at minute:second:block 00:02:00, the data starts there, and
- the audio is written after. The pregap is adjusted accordingly. This
- method never gained popularity because some drives started playing at
- 00:02:00 regardless. There doesn't seem to be a way to do this on CD-R.
-
- Some CDs perversely put audio in the pregap. You can play it by starting
- to play track 1, then holding the "reverse" button until it seeks all
- the way to the start of the disc. Some older digital audio extraction
- programs would just ignore the "hidden" audio, but most newer ones will
- extract the entire track.
-
- For example, _Factory Showroom_ by "They Might Be Giants" looks like this:
-
- TRACK 01 AUDIO
- INDEX 00 00:00:00
- INDEX 01 01:01:00
- TRACK 02 AUDIO
- INDEX 00 04:52:10
- INDEX 01 04:52:10
- TRACK 03 AUDIO
- [...]
-
- Index 01 on track 01 is usually 00:02:00. Holding down the reverse button
- backs the time up to -1:03. This disc actually causes one of my Windows
- machines (Win98SE with a Plextor 12/20 CD-ROM) to read the disc incessantly,
- making it impossible to play the disc or extract audio tracks.
-
- See section (3-36) for more information on "hiding" audio tracks.
-
-
- Subject: [3-15] How do I make a bootable CD-ROM?
- (2001/09/10)
-
- On a Mac, this is reasonably straightforward. A CD can be bootable if it
- has a bootable system folder on it. Tell the recording software that you
- want to make the CD bootable; this usually involves clicking in a checkbox
- before burning the first session. Then, copy a bootable system folder onto
- the disc. An easy way to create an appropriate system folder is to launch
- the system installer, tell it you want to do a "Custom" install, choose the
- "Universal System" option, and then install it onto the CD source volume.
- One caveat: any control panels or extensions that want to write to their
- preferences files will fail. You may need to write from a system folder
- that has been booted at least once.
-
- Detailed instructions for creating a bootable CD with Toast can be found at
- http://www.roxio.com/en/support/toast/toastbootable.html.
-
- Holding down the 'c' key while booting will cause the Mac to boot from an
- internal CD-ROM drive. Alternatively, the "Startup Disk" control panel
- will allow you to select a CD-ROM.
-
- The rest of the section applies only to PCs, which are more challenging.
-
-
- The BIOS or SCSI card on most newer machines support booting from CD-ROM,
- but on many older machines it's just not possible. Phoenix (the BIOS
- developer) and IBM have created the El Torito standard for doing this sort
- of thing. When the machine boots, if the BIOS recognizes a bootable image
- on the CD-ROM, it maps that image onto the A: floppy drive. (Depending on
- implementation, A: will move to B: and B: will go away.) From that point
- onward, it's just like booting a floppy.
-
- Not surprisingly, the way you create a bootable CD-ROM is to take an image
- of a bootable floppy disk and write it in a specific way onto the CD.
- Many of the current CD writing programs, including Easy CD Creator and
- CDRWIN, will do the hard work for you.
-
- A very nice page with lots of technical and how-to information:
- http://www.nu2.nu/bootcd/
-
- You can find El Torito specifications and a "how to" guide at:
- http://www.phoenix.com/products/specs.html
- http://www.phoenix.com/products/wp.html
-
- If you like to do things the hard way, step-by-step procedures with
- varying levels of detail can be found here:
- http://www.cdpage.com/Compact_Disc_Variations/bootablecdarticle.htm
- http://www.ozemail.com/~rossstew/drs/bootcd.html
- http://goldentimes.net/bootcd01.htm
- http://www.fadden.com/doc/bootcd.txt
-
- You can learn how to make bootable Win95b/Win98 CD-ROMs here:
- http://www.heise.de/ct/Service/English.htm/99/11/206/
-
- When booting the PC, you may need to change the boot order in the BIOS from
- the typical "A, C" to "A, SCSI, C", and configure the SCSI interface to
- attempt to boot from CD. On some adapters, the boot-up SCSI bus scan may
- take an extra second or two while the interface tries to determine if a
- bootable CD-ROM is present.
-
- Some programs insist that bootable CD-ROMs be written in plain ISO-9660
- format, not Joliet. One way around this is to write the bootable portion
- in the first session, and then write the rest of the data in a second
- session. However, not all PCs will boot a multisession disc. A better
- approach is to use a program like mkisofs (6-1-10) to create the image.
-
- The El Torito standard allows CD-ROMs to have more than one bootable
- image, but few applications support creating such images. You can use
- mkisofs with the "-eltorito-alt-boot" option to do this.
-
- If you're having trouble finding drivers for your CD-ROM drive, try the
- Win98 boot disk, or http://www.drivershq.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-16] How do I convert home movies into video on CD?
- (2002/11/22)
-
- This topic is largely outside the scope of this FAQ, so I'm not going to go
- into much depth. The Usenet newsgroup news:rec.desktop.video is more
- applicable. I'm not aware of an FAQ for that group, but the links found at
- http://www.videoguys.com/jump.htm will get you started.
-
- You need a capture device to transfer the video to your hard drive.
- Capturing high-quality video can eat up 2MB or more per *second* of video
- at full resolution (640x480x24 at 60 fields per second for NTSC) with a
- reasonable degree of compression, so this isn't something to be undertaken
- lightly. The lower your quality requirements, the lower the bandwidth
- requirements. On a fast machine, you can even get away with just a TV
- tuner card, using the software from http://www.winvcr.com/.
-
- If MPEG is your only interest, you might be better off with an MPEG-only
- card rather than a hobbyist video capture board. http://www.b-way.com/
- and http://www.darvision.com/ are good places to look. The Broadway
- card has been given high marks for quality.
-
- Once you've captured the video, you'll probably want to edit it, at least
- to clip out unwanted portions or add titles. Packages for doing this,
- like Adobe Premiere and Ulead MediaStudio, are usually included with the
- capture card. These will also let you adjust the resolution, color depth,
- and compression quality to output the video so that it's suitable for
- playback on double- or quad-speed CD-ROM drives.
-
- You can convert AVI files to MPEG and vice-versa with a program from Ulead
- (see http://www.ulead.com/), Xing Technologies, or several other vendors.
- You should be able to create QuickTime or AVI movies using the compression
- codec of your choice from the video editing software. A good choice is
- TMPGEncoder, from http://www.tmpgenc.com/e_main.html.
-
- Once created, you can write the AVI, MPEG, or MOV (QuickTime) file to a
- CD-ROM like you would anything else. If you'd like to view the disc in a
- DVD player or other VideoCD playback device, read the next section. Note
- that not all DVD players are capable of reading CD-R media, so if VideoCD
- on CD-R playback is important to you, check the DVD player feature set
- before you buy.
-
- Converting directly to DVD format is pretty reasonable now, with relatively
- inexpensive DVD-R recorders and authoring software. Some Macintoshes ship
- with iMovie/iDVD and a DVD recorder built in.
-
- The MPV (MultiPhoto/Video) specification was announced in November 2002.
- It's purpose is to define a standard way of storing pictures, videos,
- and audio on digital media. This could eventually be the preferred way
- to store movies on a disc. See http://www.osta.org/mpv/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-16-1] How do I create a VideoCD from AVI or MPEG files?
- (2001/07/23)
-
- This section assumes you already have the video captured on the hard drive of
- your computer. If you don't know how to do that, read the previous section.
-
- The goal is to create a White Book VideoCD, which can be viewed on any
- VideoCD-compatible playback device. Most PCs and Macs have some amount
- of support, as do many DVD players, so even if you can't find a dedicated
- VideoCD player or CD-i box you should be able to find a way to watch them.
-
- VideoCDs can only be read by CD-ROM drives capable of reading CD-ROM/XA
- discs. If your drive doesn't claim to support PhotoCD, you're probably
- out of luck, but this is rare. Microsoft's ActiveMovie (now Windows Media
- Architecture) and Apple's Video Player can play movies off of a VideoCD.
- Depending on the software you have installed, you may get a nice player,
- or you may need to examine the disc manually and open the ".dat" files in
- the "mpegav" directory.
-
- If you were hoping to play your VideoCD on a DVD player, you should read
- about VideoCD and CD-R/CD-RW compatibility with DVD players first. See
- http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html#2.4.5 and section (2-13).
-
- CD-R software packages like Easy CD Creator, Nero, and GEAR can write
- MPEG-1 movies onto a CD in the necessary format. You have to be careful
- when creating the MPEGs, because if the encoding parameters (frame rate,
- number of pixels, etc) don't match the VideoCD parameters you may have
- trouble getting the CD writing software to accept the movie.
-
- You can include still frames from JPEG images as well. Most VideoCD
- creation software provides a way to organize "assets"
-
- John Schlichther's "avi2vcd" combines standard tools into an easy-to-use
- program for Win95 and NT. You can use it to convert an AVI file into a
- VideoCD-compatible stream. http://home.cogeco.ca/~avi2vcd/
-
- Another choice is TMPGEncoder, from http://www.tmpgenc.com/e_main.html.
-
- If you're running Linux you should take a look at Bernhard Schwall's
- "avi2yuv" program. It converts M-JPEG movies created with popular video
- capture boards into a format accepted by the Berkeley MPEG-1 and MPEG-2
- encoders (ftp://bmrc.berkeley.edu/pub/mpeg/). The README for avi2yuv lists
- the additional software packages (all of which are free and run under
- Linux) needed for creating MPEG movies complete with sound. Most (all?) of
- the utilities can also be built to run under DOS.
- http://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/graphics/convert/.
-
- "iFilmEdit", from http://www.cinax.com/Products/ifilmedit.html, will
- convert MPEG to VideoCD, and can reportedly convert a VideoCD .DAT file
- back into a plain MPEG file.
-
- "VCDGear", from http://www.vcdgear.com/, converts between .dat and .mpg.
-
- http://www.vcdhelp.com/ has software and information.
-
- The "VideoCD Cook Book" at http://www.flexion.org/video/VideoCD/0.html
- is worth a look.
-
- Easy CD Creator, as of v3.x, requires that an MPEG MCI driver be installed in
- the system (unlike CD Creator, it doesn't come with Xing's MPEG software).
- The popular VMPEG 1.7 doesn't quite work: ECDC can't see the audio, and
- you're not allowed to select the frame to view when shuffling streams
- around. If you have VMPEG installed as the MCI driver -- select "About
- ECDC" from the Help menu to check -- you need to *remove* VMPEG and then
- install ActiveMovie. (I removed under Win95 it by going into the Advanced
- section of the Multimedia control panel, expanding "Media Control Devices",
- selecting vmpegdll, and clicking on "Remove", but you may be able to use
- Add/Remove Programs instead.) ECDC v3.x was very picky about the video
- streams; v4.02 is much better.
-
- Finally, you should be aware that MPEG playback is rather CPU intensive, and
- it's possible to create movies that don't play very well on slower machines
- (90MHz Pentium, 68K Macs) without hardware support. Machines built in 1997
- or later shouldn't have trouble.
-
-
- Subject: [3-16-2] How do I create an SVCD?
- (2000/11/13)
-
- First, read about creating a VCD in section (3-16-1).
-
- Next, read http://www.uwasa.fi/~f76998/video/svcd/overview/.
-
- The links near the end of the document point to some pages with SVCD
- authoring instructions. Programs such as Nero Burning ROM (6-1-28) and
- Enreach I-Author (6-1-61) are able to create such discs.
-
-
- Subject: [3-16-3] How do I create an AVCD?
- (2002/07/29)
-
- Some discs have been produced that call themselves "AVCD", as in
- audio-video CD. For example, Kylie Minogue's "Fever" CD was released
- as a two-disc set in Asia. Disc one was the "Fever" audio CD, disc
- two had four VideoCD video tracks and five bonus audio tracks.
-
- If you put disc two into a CD player, you would hear nothing for track 1
- (which holds the VideoCD filesystem) or tracks 2 through 5 (the video
- data). If you fast-forwarded to track 6, you would hear music.
-
- If you put disc two into a VideoCD player or compatible DVD player,
- you would be treated to the first video track. By skipping forward
- you could get to the later video tracks and eventually play the audio
- tracks.
-
- This makes perfect sense until you try to figure out how the same audio
- track is being played on a CD player and on a VideoCD player. If you
- try to create a VideoCD with extra audio tracks, the VideoCD player
- will not find them.
-
- The trick used by the AVCD publishers is to encode the audio tracks twice.
- The songs are present both as Red Book CD audio tracks and as VideoCD
- compressed audio. A directory called "CDDA" holds files with names like
- "AUDIO06.DAT" that contain compressed audio. Unlike the video tracks,
- these don't actually correspond to tracks on the disc.
-
- To create such a disc, you would need VideoCD authoring software capable
- of incorporating audio tracks. You could then record the VideoCD while
- leaving the session open, and append the audio tracks using track-at-once
- recording. Better results would be obtained by writing the video and audio
- tracks with disc-at-once recording, but that might require a greater level
- of VideoCD support than most recording applications currently provide.
-
- See section (3-16-1) for more tips on VideoCD.
-
-
- Subject: [3-17] How can I burn several copies of the same disc simultaneously?
- (2003/07/08)
-
- You can if you have several CD-R drives and the right software. Two
- examples are CD Rep from Prassi Software (section (6-1-21)) and DiscJuggler
- from Padus (section (6-1-27)). [The Prassi product appears to have been
- discontinued.]
-
- Both products are SCSI multiplexors. You use your existing CD writing
- application (such as Easy-CD Pro 95) like you normally would, and the
- program sends the same commands to each of the CD-R drives. There are a
- number of limitations, notably that all devices must use the same command
- set and may need to have the same firmware revision. There may also be
- limits on the number of drives you can have attached at once.
-
- DiscJuggler bills itself as "the professional CD Duplicator", CD Rep as
- "the ultimate professional recording solution". If you're interested in
- either of these, you should read the web pages for both, and compare the
- features available.
-
- There are several hardware-based solutions to this, including CD-R units
- that support daisy-chaining, and control units that vary from the simple (a
- handful of units wired together) to the complex (robotic arms to move discs
- around). Most cost more than a Hyundai.
-
- See http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/Technology/CD-R/duplication.html for an
- overview of several different hardware solutions, or visit a vendor web
- page like http://www.princetondiskette.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-18] Can I make copies of copies?
- (2002/12/09)
-
- The following was part of an e-mail message from Jeff Arnold back in
- mid-1997:
-
- "I do not recommend making "copies of copies" with SNAPSHOT. The reason
- this does not always work is because many CDROM readers do not perform
- error correction of the data when doing raw sectors reads. As a result,
- you end up with errors on the copy that may or may not be correctable.
- When you make a second-generation copy of the same disc, you will make a
- disc that has all of the errors of the first copy, plus all of the new
- errors from the second reading of the disc. The cumulative errors from
- multiple copies will result in a disc that is no longer readable."
-
- This initially generated some confusion, so further explanation is needed.
- The heart of the problem is the way that that the data is read from
- the source device. When a program does "raw" sector reads, it gets the
- entire 2352-byte block, which includes the CD-ROM error correction data
- (ECC) for the sector. Instead of applying the ECC to the sector data,
- many drives just hand back the entire block, including any errors that
- couldn't be corrected by the first C1/C2 layer of error correction (see
- section (2-17)). When the block is written to the CD-R, the uncorrected
- errors are written along with it.
-
- The problem can be avoided completely by using "cooked" reads and writes.
- Rather than create an exact duplicate of the 2352-byte source sector, cooked
- reads pull off the error-corrected 2048-byte sector. The CD recorder
- regenerates the appropriate error correction when the data is written.
-
- Some drives and some software will error-correct the 2048 bytes of CD-ROM
- data read in "raw" mode. This limits the risk of generation loss to errors
- introduced in the ECC bytes. If the software also regenerates the ECC,
- it is effectively emulating "cooked" reads and writes in "raw" mode.
-
- This begs the question, why not just use cooked writes all the time?
- First of all, some older recorders (e.g. Philips CDD2000 and HP4020i)
- didn't support cooked writes. (Some others will do cooked but can't do
- raw, e.g. the Pinnacle RCD-5040.) Second, not all discs use 2048-byte
- MODE-1 sectors. There is no true "cooked" mode for MODE-2 data tracks;
- even a block length of 2336 is considered raw, so using cooked reads won't
- prevent generation loss.
-
- It is important to emphasize that the error correction included in the data
- sector is a *second* layer of protection. A clean original disc may well
- have no uncorrectable errors, and will yield an exact duplicate even when
- copying in "raw" mode. After a few generations, though, the duplicates are
- likely to suffer some generation loss.
-
-
- The original version of this quote went on to comment that Plextor and Sony
- CD-ROM drives were not recommended for making copies of copies. The reason
- they were singled out is because they are the only drives that explicitly
- warned about this problem in their programming manuals. It is possible
- that *all* CD-ROM drives behave the same way. (In fact, it is arguably the
- correct behavior... you want raw data, you get raw data.)
-
- The final answer to this question is, you can safely make copies of copies,
- so long as the disc is a MODE-1 CD-ROM and you're using "cooked" writes.
- Copies made with "raw" writes may suffer generation loss because of
- uncorrected errors.
-
- Audio tracks don't have the second layer of ECC, and will be susceptible to
- the same generation loss as data discs duplicated in "raw" mode. Some
- drives may turn off some error-correcting features, such as dropped-sample
- interpolation, during digital audio extraction, or may only use them when
- extracting at 1x. If you want to find out what your drive is capable of,
- try extracting the same track from a CD several times at different speeds,
- then do a binary comparison on the results. PC owners can use the DOS "FC"
- command to do this, as described in section (3-3).
-
- It's worth noting that the C1/C2 error correction present on all types
- of CDs is pretty good, so it is entirely possible to make multi-generation
- copies with no errors whatsoever. The "cooked" approach for CD-ROMs just
- happens to be safer.
-
-
- Subject: [3-19] How can I compress or encrypt data on a CD-ROM?
- (2003/01/13)
-
- The easiest way is to use your favorite compression or encryption utility
- and process the files before putting them on the CD. However, this isn't
- transparent to the end user.
-
- CRI-X3 enables programs like DoubleSpace to work on a CD. It's intended
- for a publisher or for significant internal use, and the licensing is priced
- accordingly. See http://www.cdrominc.com/. (Side note: the company filed
- patent infringement suits against Traxdata and CeQuadrat in Sep 1998 for
- distributing CD compression software. This might account for the dearth
- of similar applications.)
-
- A straightforward solution is to write all of the files onto the disc
- as .ZIP files, and then use ZipMagic (formerly ZipFolders) to view the
- contents. It can be found at http://www.ontrack.com/zipmagic/.
-
- PGP at http://www.nai.com/ (was http://www.pgp.com) has some good
- encryption software, but none of it seems directly applicable to software
- distribution. PGPdisk, available for the Mac, might be useful but it isn't
- clear whether it can be used to distribute CD-ROMs.
-
- ScramDisk, from http://www.scramdisk.clara.net/, writes files into
- encrypted "containers" on disk. It can be used with CD-ROMs, runs under
- Win95 and Win98, is free, and even includes source code.
-
- http://www.c-dilla.com/ had information on CD-Secure 2, which allowed
- publishers to distribute network-licensed or "pay for the parts you
- need" products, and CD-Compress 2, which provides a way to compress data
- transparently on production CDs. The company is now part of Macrovision.
-
- EnCrypt-CD encrypts the blocks as they are written to CD. It's a shareware
- product, available from http://www.shareit.com/programs/102046.htm.
-
- Encrypted Magic Folders from http://www.pc-magic.com/ claims to
- transparently encrypt data as it's being used. Whether it would work from
- a CD-ROM isn't stated.
-
- http://cd-lock.com/ offers Blowfish encryption and scrambled filenames.
- End users don't need to install software to decrypt the disks if they're
- running Win2K or WinXP. (Appears to be related to pc-magic.com, above.)
-
- You can install a cryptographic filesystem (called "CFS") under Linux; see
- http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Security-HOWTO-6.html#ss6.10. Create a
- crypto-fs, copy your data onto it, then use mkisofs with Rock Ridge
- extensions enabled to create an ISO-9660 disc image of the encrypted data.
- Burn the image to CD-ROM.
-
- You may be able to use E4M, from http://www.e4m.net.
-
- BestCrypt, from http://www.jetico.com/, lets you create encrypted virtual
- volumes in a file that can be stored on CD-R media.
-
- You can get PC Guardian's CD-ROM encryption from http://www.pcguardian.com/.
-
- WinDefender, available from http://www.RTSecurity.com/products/windefender,
- provides transparent CD-ROM encryption from Windows.
-
- Dynamic-CD can encrypt and password-protect CD-ROMs. See
- http://www.dynamic-cd.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-20] Can I do backups onto CD-R?
- (2001/09/26)
-
- Yes. See section (6-7) for software.
-
- Of course, it's not really necessary to use special software if you're just
- backing up your data files. Most CD creation programs will allow you to
- copy arbitrary files onto CD-ROM, and by using the Joliet standard or the
- UDF filesystem you can preserve long filenames. Unfortunately, if you're
- not using packet writing, the individual files may show up as read-only
- under DOS and Windows, so write permission must be re-enabled by hand when
- the files are restored. With packet writing applications like DirectCD
- or PacketCD, the correct file permissions are maintained.
-
- (See section (3-57) for instructions on clearing the read-only flag.)
-
- One thing to be careful of on Windows-based PCs: most programs that put
- files on CD don't preserve the *short* file names that are automatically
- generated for files with long file names. This presents a problem because
- the short form is often stored in the Registry and INI files instead of the
- long form (try searching your Registry for "~1"). When your system is
- restored, it may not be able to find the files anymore.
-
- A way to work around this is to use a backup program that understands only
- the short filenames, and save the long ones with LFNBK. A program called
- DOSLFNBK at http://www8.pair.com/dmurdoch/programs/doslfnbk.htm may be more
- convenient than LFNBK.
-
-
- Is CD-R better than, say, DDS-3 tapes? Maybe. Tape formats like DDS and DLT
- hold considerably more than a CD-R, but because the drives are streaming
- rather than random access, recovery of a specific file can be slower.
- For backing up a large system or network, tapes are more convenient.
- For making backups of a small system, especially one where access to older
- versions of files is frequently desired, CD-R is the better choice.
-
- Some people prefer CD-RW. For daily incrementals, CD-RW makes sense. For
- weekly or monthly full backups, you probably want to retain the discs in
- case file corruption or deletion goes unnoticed for some time.
-
- The longevity of magnetic tape is well understood (around 15 years for
- most formats). The longevity of CD-R is a little harder to quantify.
- See section (7-5) for details.
-
-
- Subject: [3-21] How do I automatically launch something? Change the CD icon?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- This can get surprisingly involved on a PC. The next few sub-sections
- go into detail. For a Mac, the answers are pretty simple:
-
- You can use the Macintosh equivalent of Autorun (QuickTime 2.0 Autostart)
- to automatically launch an application or document on the Mac. The
- "-auto" flag of mkhybrid (6-1-32) lets you specify this.
-
- Changing the icon on the Mac can be done by using Toast to record a disc
- image (record by "Volume" instead of "Files and Folders"). Change the icon
- on the disc image file from the Command-I window in the Finder, then record
- it.
-
-
- Subject: [3-21-1] How does Windows "autorun" work?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- The "autorun" feature of Windows 95 and later allows a program to be executed
- right after a CD-ROM is inserted. For this to work, the system must have
- autorun enabled, and Auto Insert Notification ("AIN") must be turned on
- for the CD-ROM drive. See section (4-1-1) for more information on AIN and
- the use of "TweakUI" to modify settings. It may also be necessary, in some
- configurations, to close the last session on the disc, or AIN will not work.
-
- When preparing a CD-ROM for Windows, put a text file called "autorun.inf"
- in the root directory that contains something like this:
-
- [autorun]
- open=filename.exe
- icon=someicon.ico
-
- When inserted, the CD-ROM will be shown in the "My Computer" window with
- the specified icon. If the disc is inserted on a system with AIN and
- autorun enabled, the program named on the "open" line will be launched.
-
- Icons must be in Windows icon or bitmap format. You can't use a GIF
- or JPEG. Make it square, 32x32 pixels. If you're going to be doing
- a lot of these, you may want to try Axialis "IconWorkshop", from
- http://www.axialis.com/axicons/.
-
- There doesn't appear to be a way to specify custom icons for individual
- folders.
-
- Incidentally, the "root" directory is the top level of the disc, e.g. "D:\".
- (If you viewed a directory hierarchy as a tree growing upward, the topmost
- directory would be at the root of the tree.)
-
- Here's a more complicated example:
-
- [autorun]
- open = setup.exe /i
- icon = setup.exe, 1
- shell\configure = &Configure...
- shell\configure\command = setup.exe /c
- shell\install = &Install...
- shell\install\command = setup.exe /i
- shell\readme = &Read Me
- shell\readme\command = notepad help\readme.txt
- shell\help = &Help
- shell\help\command = winhlp32 help\helpfile.hlp
-
- Taking it line by line, this says:
- - The default AutoRun command will be "setup /i"
- - The icon for the CD will be icon #1 embedded in setup.exe
-
- - Four commands will be added to the right-click pop-up menu:
- 'Configure...',
- which will run "setup /c"
- 'Install...',
- which will run "setup /i" (same as auto-run in this case)
- 'Read Me',
- which launches notepad.exe to display "help\readme.txt"
- 'Help',
- which displays the file "help\helpfile.hlp" with the Win95 help facility
-
- You can test the autorun features of a disc without recording one. If you
- SUBST a folder onto a drive letter, the autorun feature will scan the new
- drive. For example, from a DOS prompt, enter "SUBST J: \goodies\NewCD".
- This technique is also useful for testing out a CD-ROM you're preparing.
-
- If you'd rather not have to deal with all this, try one of the applications
- listed in section (3-21-3).
-
-
- Subject: [3-21-2] How do I launch a document (like a web page)?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- In the past it was recommended to use the "start" command, e.g. "open=start
- index.htm". However, "start.exe" doesn't exist in the Windows NT family
- (NT4, 2000, XP).
-
- You can launch documents with Windows Explorer on any version of Windows,
- like this:
-
- [autorun]
- open=explorer.exe index.htm
-
- However, it appears to ignore your browser settings. So, even if you've
- chosen to make Netscape or Opera your web browser, it will still open the
- HTML file with Internet Explorer.
-
- An alternative to "start", called "shellout", is available from the "files"
- section on http://www.mrichter.com/. This is a trivial launcher that
- you copy onto a disc and use like this:
-
- [autorun]
- open=shellout index.htm
-
- It appears to avoid the above problems, is only 20K, and is free.
-
- For more information on autorun:
-
- http://www.microsoft.com/msj/defaulttop.asp?page=/msj/0499/win32/win320499top.htm
-
- Instructions for making a VideoCD autoplay under Windows can be found at
- http://navasgrp.home.att.net/tech/autoplay_vcd.htm.
-
-
- Subject: [3-21-3] What autorun software is available?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- Some simple, configurable autorun applications (launchers and menus) are
- available, most as shareware:
-
- http://cloanto.com/menubox/
- http://www.indigorose.com/
- http://www.pollensoftware.com/autorun/
- http://www.phdcc.com/shellrun/
- http://www.mediachance.com/
- http://www.pgd.dk/
- http://hyper-publish.com/
- http://www.trah.co.uk/starterfile/
- http://www.startertool.com/
- http://go.to/traction/
- http://www.timeless.co.zw/software.cfm
-
-
- Subject: [3-22] How can I be sure the data was written correctly?
- (2002/12/10)
-
- The easiest way is to compare the original with the copy. Some programs,
- such as recent versions of Nero, will automatically compare the disc
- contents with the original files. You can also use something like CD-R
- Verifier from http://www.cdrom-prod.com/cd-r_verifier.html or CDCchedk
- from http://Fusion.zejn.si/ to check the contents of an entire CD-ROM easily.
-
- Another way is to do a recursive file-by-file comparison. Programs that
- compute CRCs on files and then compare them (often used for virus-checking)
- will work.
-
- One way to do this is with use the UNIX "diff" utility, which is
- available for Windows (along with many other similar utilities) from
- http://www.reedkotler.com/. If you had copied the contents of C:\MyData
- onto a CD-R at E:\, you would use:
-
- diff -q -r C:\MyData E:
-
- The "-q" flag tells it to report if the files differ, but not show what
- the differences are, and the "-r" flag says to descend into directories
- recursively.
-
- There are many other options. A utility called "treediff", available
- from the Simtel archives (http://www.simtel.com/), may be helpful.
- http://www.funduc.com/directory_toolkit.htm has a shareware program with
- some relevant features. http://www.araxis.com/ has an evaluation copy
- of PMdiff, available for Windows and native OS/2. You can get "FileSync"
- from http://www.fileware.co.uk/.
-
- You can also use Microsoft's WinDiff, which -- unlike some of the
- programs mentioned earlier -- understands long filenames. It can be
- found on Microsoft's recent operating system discs, e.g. on Win98 it
- lives in \tools\reskit\file\windiff.exe. It used to be available for
- download from ftp.microsoft.com, but they rearrange that site frequently,
- so there's not much point in including a URL.
-
- An alternative to windiff is xdiff, from http://www.wookie.demon.co.uk/xdiff/.
-
- Rocksoft Pty has a product called Veracity (http://www.veracity.com/) that
- can check the integrity of a directory tree.
-
- Visit http://www.fuw.edu.pl/~jt/cdvfy/ for some shell scripts that will
- compute MD5 checksums on a tree. Under Windows, try Advanced CheckSum
- Verifier from http://www.irnis.net/ for MD5 and CRC32, or md5summer
- from http://www.md5summer.org/.
-
- If you *really* want to verify your discs, try http://www.audiodev.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-23] How do I create, copy, or play Audio Karaoke/CD+G discs?
- (2003/10/14)
-
- For playing Karaoke and CD+G:
-
- - Various - http://www.karaoke.com/downcdg.html
- - WinCDG - http://windowstracker.com/
-
- For creating them:
-
- - PowerKaraoke - http://www.powerkaraoke.com/
- - CD+G Creator - section (6-1-52)
- - DART Karaoke Studio - http://www.dartpro.com/products/DARTKarStudioCDGV1.asp
- - Karaoke Builder - http://www.karaokebuilder.com/
- - Some fancy stuff - http://www.mtu.com/
-
- For copying them (some software can do individual tracks):
-
- - CDRWIN - section (6-1-7)
- - CloneCD - section (6-1-49)
-
- To copy a disc, your reader and writer should ideally support "RAW DAO-96"
- mode. The CD+G data is stored in the R-W subcode channels (section (2-6)),
- which not all drives are able to read and/or write.
-
- See http://magicland.com/karaoke/drives.htm for a list of CD-ROM drives
- compatible with Karaoke CDs, and check the CloneCD page for a list of
- recorders that support "raw" reads and writes.
-
-
- Subject: [3-24] How do I copy a CD-ROM with 3GB of data on it? A huge VideoCD?
- (2002/12/20)
-
- You don't. The CD-ROM doesn't actually have that much data on it. Some CD
- publishers use a trick where they reference the same spot on the disc several
- times with overlapping files. If you try to do a file-by-file copy from
- the disc onto your hard drive, you'll end up with several copies of the
- same blocks, and more data than can fit on a CD-ROM.
-
- VideoCDs often appear to have individual files that are 700MB or more.
- In this case, they really *are* that big. They're written in a special
- format (CD-ROM/XA Mode-2 Form-2) that drops error correction in favor
- of more space. This works fine for video data, but is definitely not
- recommended for ordinary data.
-
- If you want to duplicate a CD-ROM, you should use a program meant for the
- purpose (CloneCD, CDRWIN, etc). Some software is more capable of dealing
- with complex CDs than others, so if you have a particular kind of CD in
- mind (such as VideoCD) you should check the capabilities of the software
- before making a purchase.
-
-
- Subject: [3-25] How do I get my CD-R pressed into a real CD?
- (2000/04/11)
-
- There are a large number of companies that will do modest production
- runs of pressed CDs, but listing them is beyond the scope of this FAQ.
-
- Do a web search on "CD duplication" and "CD replication", or check out
- http://www.cd-webstore.com/BurningIssues.html (a licensed-access web
- site from the www.cd-info.com folks).
-
- Sometimes a disc submitted for duplication will be rejected due to E32
- (uncorrectable) errors. If you have a disc rejected, make sure you are using
- disc-at-once recording mode -- the gaps left between tracks by track-at-once
- mode are sometimes interpreted as errors. If the problems persist, try
- changing to a different kind of media, or even a different recorder.
-
-
- Subject: [3-26] How do I make a CD without that two-second gap between tracks?
- (2000/03/10)
-
- Most CD recorders are capable of doing this, given the right software. The
- key is to use disc-at-once recording instead of track-at-once.
-
- Some programs give you a great deal of control. Golden Hawk's CDRWIN
- (6-1-7) will let you specify the gap size for each track, down to zero, and
- set the location of the track and index marks. You can put each track in a
- separate file or have the entire recording in a single file. Other
- programs, like ECDC (6-1-26), are easier to use but less flexible.
-
- You will almost certainly need to use disc-at-once recording. Most drives
- insist on inserting a two-second gap between tracks when track-at-once
- recording is used, and those that don't will at best leave an instant of
- silence between tracks. You can eliminate the gaps from a TAO recording by
- putting the entire CD into one track, but then you lose the ability to seek
- immediately to the start of a song.
-
- Most PC and Mac software support both TAO and DAO recording modes. It's
- prudent to check the web pages before you buy.
-
- If you want to break up a long recording into several WAV files (one per
- track), it's important to split tracks on precise 2352-byte boundaries.
- If you don't, you'll get tiny periods of silence or noise, lasting less
- than 1/75th of a second, that may be clearly audible depending on the
- context. A handy Windows utility called "CD Wave" (section (6-2-16))
- is good at splitting large WAV files into smaller ones, and can do so on
- block boundaries.
-
- If you want to mix WAV tracks together, take a look at Multiquence,
- http://www.goldwave.com/multiquence/index.html. A simpler merge utility
- is "wavmerge", from http://www.mrichter.com/cdr/files/files.htm.
-
-
- Subject: [3-27] How can I record RealAudio (.ra), MIDI, WMA, and MP3 on a CD?
- (2001/01/22)
-
- Most CD players can only handle uncompressed audio in "Red Book" format.
- Some newer player, such as the AIWA CDC-MP3 and Philips Expanium, can play
- MP3 files from a CD-ROM. Such discs should be written in ISO-9660 with
- 8+3 filenames, and ought to use 128Kbps and "plain" stereo for broadest
- compatibility. The documentation for the I-Jam (http://www.ijamworld.com/)
- recommends putting no more than 50 MP3 files in a directory.
-
- If you don't have such a player, though, you need to write a standard
- "Red Book" audio CD. The first step is to convert from whatever format
- the sound is in to WAV or AIFF. In some cases (e.g. MP3), many of the
- popular CD recording programs will do the conversion for you. If not, you
- will need to convert it to 44.1KHz 16-bit stereo PCM format. Once it's
- in WAV or (on the Mac) AIFF format, you can record it as you would audio
- taken from other CDs. Be sure to play it back once after you convert it
- to make sure that it came out okay.
-
- For a tutorial on converting CD-DA to MP3 and vice-versa, see
- http://www.cdpage.com/Compact_Disc_Consulting/Tutorial/mp3.html. The
- "getting started" guide at http://help.mp3.com/help/ is worth reading, and
- the newsgroup FAQ for alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.* at http://www.mp3-faq.org/
- is also useful. Making MP3s from CDs is discussed on
- http://mmsound.about.com/compute/mmsound/library/weekly/aa032700a.htm.
-
- WMA is Windows Media Audio, part of Microsoft's attempt to create an
- architecture for "Digital Rights Management" protected media. A WMA
- player isn't supposed to let you hear any music you don't have the right
- to play. If you want to record it to CD, and the player won't let you
- do the conversion to WAV, you can still use a general-purpose sound
- recorder like Total Recorder to do the job.
-
- There may or may not be a converter for the format you're interested in.
- Here are some links to try:
-
- MIDI
- - http://www.advicom.net/~diac/mr-home.html (MIDI Renderer)
- - http://www.polyhedric.com/software/ (MIDInight Express)
- - http://home.att.net/~audiocompositor/ (Audio Compositor)
- - http://www.dartpro.com/ (DART CD-Recorder)
-
- MPEG audio (a/k/a MP2 and MP3)
- - http://www.mpeg.org/~tristan/MPEG/mp3.html (various)
- - http://www.winamp.com/ (Winamp)
- - http://www.mp3.com/ (various)
- - (Feurio, WinOnCD, Nero, and perhaps others will record from MP3 on the fly)
-
- RealAudio
- - http://www.realaudio.com/ (Real Jukebox Plus)
-
- General (sound driver that writes to disk -- works for anything you can play)
- - http://www.HighCriteria.com/ (Total Recorder)
-
- You can't write MPEG, AC3, or other compressed audio formats to a CD-DA
- disc and expect to play it back in your car stereo. CD players only
- understand uncompressed PCM audio.
-
- See http://www.howstuffworks.com/mp3.htm for an intro to MP3 technology.
- The site at http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~djmrob/mp3decoders/ has
- comparisons of various MP3 players.
-
- http://www.sonicspot.com/multimediaconverters.html has a collection of
- converters for different formats.
-
- If you *really* want to be able to play MP3-compressed songs while driving
- down the freeway, check out http://utter.chaos.org.uk/~altman/mp3mobile/
- (or the commercial counterpart at http://www.empeg.com/).
-
-
- Subject: [3-28] How do I add CD-Text information?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- CD-Text is a standard that allows disc and track information to be embedded
- on an audio CD. The data can be read by some CD players, providing a way
- to have disc information available without having to enter it manually or
- look it up in a database.
-
- Adding CD-Text to the discs you record requires a compatible recorder and
- capable software. Support was scarce in mid-1999, but is more common now.
-
- The currently available software supports writing of album title, artist
- names, and track titles, and can copy discs with CD-Text data already on
- them. Storing lyrics within the tracks is possible but not widely
- supported.
-
- Not all CD players and CD-ROM drives can read CD-Text. If this feature is
- important to you, check the specifications before you buy. Some programs,
- notably Windows Media Player, claim to read CD-Text but will actually use
- an Internet database instead.
-
- Some MD recorders have a feature that lets you copy the CD-Text info
- from audio CDs (e.g. "Joint Text"), but it appears that some CDs prohibit
- the copying. The result is the message "Text Protected".
-
- The site http://www.ncf.carleton.ca/~aa571/cdtext.htm has some additional
- details.
-
-
- Subject: [3-29] Can I distribute a web site on a CD-ROM?
- (2003/07/08)
-
- You need to include the content and a browser on the CD. Some products that
- might be helpful are:
-
- PHD Computer Consultants - Dynamic CD (run dynamic ASP sites from CD):
- http://www.dynamic-cd.com/
-
- Softword Technology - Browse and View:
- http://www.pc-shareware.com/browser.htm
-
- Faico - NavRoad
- http://www.offlinebrowser.com/ or http://www.faico.com/
-
- Verity - Publisher
- http://www.verity.com/
-
- See http://www.phdcc.com/helpindex/cdroms.html for some suggestions on
- putting web pages on CD-ROM. See http://www.spy-cd.com/ for a Java-based
- CD search engine.
-
- See http://www.microsoftfrontpage.com/content/ARTICLES/fp_to_cdrom.html
- for an article about creating HTML CDs using FrontPage 2002.
-
- If it doesn't need to be in HTML format, the full Adobe Acrobat writer
- can reportedly convert an entire web site into a PDF document.
-
- Incidentally, if you burn the disc with plain ISO-9660, you don't have
- to worry about the upper-case filenames conflicting with lower-case names
- in URLs. The filesystem code on Windows, Mac, and UNIX converts the names
- to upper case before comparing them. This may not hold for other formats,
- e.g. Rock Ridge.
-
-
- Subject: [3-30] How do I clean my CD recorder?
- (2003/06/04)
-
- In general, you shouldn't. Generally speaking, the only reason you'd need
- to clean a recorder or (for that matter) a CD-ROM drive is if you went and
- stuck your finger on the lens. Cleaning kits and well-intentioned Q-tips
- are unnecessary and potentially dangerous. If you push too hard on the
- lens while cleaning and damage the mounting, it will no longer matter how
- clean it is.
-
- Some people report drives coming back to life after a careful cleaning,
- so there may be some value in doing so. If your drive has become
- increasingly flaky over time, cleaning it may help.
-
- [ Personal note: I've never had to clean a lens in *any* CD player,
- including a flip-up top-loading boom box that I've had since mid-1990.
- I can *see* the dust inside, and I can see the lens, but it has no problem
- playing discs. I can't imagine how a recorder that's only a year or two
- old is going to collect enough dust to fail, unless you play a lot of
- really crusty discs. ]
-
- If you have an overwhelming desire to clear loose dust out of your recorder,
- and can't or don't want to send it to a service center, use gentle(!)
- bursts of compressed air (like that used to clean camera lenses). The idea
- is to knock any dust loose without knocking the lens free of its mounting.
- A more vigorous approach is to use a Q-tip and 99% isopropyl alcohol
- (a/k/a isopropanol or IPA), but this should only be used if the previous
- approach fails. If you can only find 70% "rubbing alcohol", try to find
- 99% methyl alcohol (a/k/a methyl-hydrate or methanol), which is widely
- recommended for cleaning magnetic tape heads. It can usually be found in
- paint or automotive stores as shellac thinner or windshield antifreeze.
-
- The Repair FAQ at http://www.repairfaq.org/ has a section about CD-ROM
- drives that seems relevant. Find the "Compact Disc Players and CDROM Drives"
- section, and skip down to part 4. One relevant quote, from section 4.3,
- regarding "cleaning discs":
-
- "I generally don't consider CD lens cleaning discs to be of much value
- for preventive maintenance since they may just move the crud around.
- However, for pure non-greasy dust (no tobacco smoke and no cooking
- grease), they probably do not hurt and may do a good enough job to put
- off a proper cleaning for a while longer. However, since there are
- absolutely no sorts of standards for these things, it is possible for a
- really poorly designed cleaning disc to damage the lens. In addition,
- if it doesn't look like a CD to the optical pickup or disc-in sensor,
- the lens cleaning disc may not even spin. So, the drawer closes, the
- drawer opens, and NOTHING has been accomplished!"
-
-
- Subject: [3-31] Is it better to record at slower speeds?
- (2003/01/13)
-
- It depends on your recorder, media, and who you talk to. For example,
- some informal testing with the venerable Yamaha CDR-100 determined
- that it worked best at 4x speed with media certified for 4x writes.
- 1x worked almost as well, but 2x would occasionally produce discs with
- unrecoverable errors.
-
- With audio CDs, the results are more subjective. Some people have asserted
- that you should always write at 1x, others have stated that 2x may actually
- be better. It depends on the recorder, media, player, and your ears. Try
- it both ways and listen. See section (4-18) for some notes on how you can
- write the same set of bits to two CDs and still have audible differences.
-
- CD-R media is written by heating up tiny sections of the disc. When the
- disc spins faster, the laser has less time to shine on a particular spot,
- so the laser has to be controlled differently. Different formulations of
- media may require a different "write strategy" at certain speeds, and each
- recorder may adjust its write strategy differently to accommodate those
- speeds. This can potentially result in combinations of recorder and media
- that work perfectly at one speed but fail miserably at another.
-
- Put simply, there's more to writing at high speed than just spinning faster.
- It's entirely possible that writing slowly to "high-speed" media will
- produce significantly worse results than writing to it quickly.
-
- There is no One True Answer to this question. Do what works best for
- what you have. Some experimentation may be required.
-
- See "The Speed of Sound: How Safe is High-Speed CD-Audio Recording?" at
- http://www.emedialive.com/EM2000/starrett5.html, for a very thorough
- analysis of audio disc quality at several different speeds. With some
- recorders and some media, it's actually better to write faster -- but in
- none of the tests performed did the error rate get anywhere near danger
- levels, regardless of speed.
-
- See the graphs in the article "Glenn Meadows' CDR Tests" at
- http://www.digido.com/ for an examination of BLER (BLock Error Rate) with
- different recorders, different media, and different recording speeds.
- A few of the graphs show the same recorder and same media at different
- speeds, and in some cases the BLER increased at higher speeds, while in
- others it decreased.
-
- There is some cause to believe that recording at higher speeds can result
- in increasing "jitter". This doesn't cause any difference in BLER or in
- the extracted audio, but is audible during playback. See section (2-41).
-
- See http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/History/Commentary/Parker/stcroix.html for
- commentary about "write strategy" selection and different media types.
-
-
- Subject: [3-32] Where do I get drivers for my CD recorder?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- In general, you don't need them. Software that burns CD-Rs has the
- necessary drivers built in.
-
- If you want to use certain older recorders as CD-ROM drives, you may need
- drivers for them. See section (5-8).
-
-
- Subject: [3-33] Can I copy discs without breaking the law?
- (2001/01/06)
-
- This varies significantly from country to country. Information for USA
- and Canada follows. Most nations have some form of copyright protection
- that restricts duplication.
-
-
- Subject: [3-33-1] ...in the United States of America?
- (2001/01/06)
-
- You are allowed to make an archival backup of software, but the same
- doesn't necessarily hold true for music. The Home Rights Recording Act
- will allow you to duplicate music under certain circumstances.
-
- A discussion of the topic, including details on past and pending
- legislation, can be found on the Home Recording Rights Coalition web site
- at http://www.hrrc.org/. The text of the Home Rights Recording Act can
- also be found here.
-
- The Recording Industry Association of America, which represents the music
- industry, has a web site at http://www.riaa.com/.
-
- An article entitled, "Copying Music to CD: The Right, the Wrong, and the
- Law" is at http://www.emediapro.com/EM1998/starrett2.html.
-
- http://www.brouhaha.com/~eric/bad_laws/dat_tax.html has some relevant
- information and pointers.
-
- http://www.bmi.com/ and http://www.ascap.com/ have yet more perspectives
- on legislation.
-
-
- Subject: [3-33-2] ...in Canada?
- (2003/09/16)
-
- Rules for copying software resemble those in the USA.
-
- The rules for music are more lenient. Because of the media tax imposed
- by the Canadian government (see section (7-13)), you are allowed to copy
- any music for your own personal use. This means that you can go over to
- a friend's house and copy any number of discs you like, so long as they
- are for your own use. You are not allowed to make copies of music and
- then give them to others.
-
- See http://www.cb-cda.gc.ca/decisions/copying%2De.html, notably "Tariff
- of levies to be collected by CPCC in 1999 and 2000 for the sale of blank
- audio recording media in Canada" (PDF in both English and French).
-
- http://techcentralstation.com/081803C.html points out that downloading MP3
- files from P2P networks (e.g. the original Napster) is legal in Canada.
- (The article actually claims that sharing is entirely legal, but by the
- terms of the law downloading is legal and uploading is not.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-34] Can CD-Rs recorded at 2x be read faster than 2x?
- (1999/09/22)
-
- Of course.
-
- The only possible basis in fact for the, "if it was recorded at 2x, you
- can't read it faster than 2x" rumors is that some drives have trouble
- reading CD-R media. Discs that are hard to read when spinning at 12x may
- become easier to read when spinning at 4x. It has also been noted that
- some recorders will write more legible discs at certain speeds (e.g. the
- Yamaha CDR-100, which works better at 1x or 4x than it does at 2x). None
- of this should lead anyone to conclude, however, that the write speed and
- read speed are tied directly together. The reader, writer, and media all
- have a role in determining how quickly a CD-R can spin and be readable.
-
- It's also the case that discs written at high speed (say 8x) can be read by
- drives *slower* than 8x. So if you're distributing discs to people with
- old 4x CD-ROM drives, you don't have to worry about them not being able to
- read at 8x. Of course, if the CD-ROM is poorly constructed, or the writer
- is producing marginal discs at high speeds, you might see evidence to the
- contrary, but there is no technical barrier to reading discs recorded at
- 8x or 12x on a slower drive.
-
-
- Subject: [3-35] How do I make my CD-ROM work on the Mac, WinNT, and UNIX?
- (2002/08/01)
-
- This is a tricky one because of issues with long filenames and file
- attributes. Mac CD-ROMs are typically burned with an HFS filesystem, not
- ISO-9660, and WinNT uses a different scheme for long filenames (Joliet)
- than UNIX does (Rock Ridge). Some variants of UNIX will recognize the
- Joliet names, but neither Windows nor the Mac understands Rock Ridge. You
- might be able to use an HFS CD-ROM on a platform other than the Mac, but if
- you're distributing software, it's not wise to assume that your customers
- will be able to do the same.
-
- The easiest way to create a disc that will work on all platforms is to use
- plain level 1 ISO-9660, with 8+3 filenames and no special file attributes.
- If you need to include Mac applications as well as data -- or pretty much
- anything with a resource fork -- this simple approach won't work. Also,
- some older versions of Mac OS and HP/UX might not work as expected unless
- you record the disk without the usually-invisible version number (";1").
-
- There is an Apple-defined extension to ISO-9660 that allows the Mac file
- and creator types to be present on an ISO-9660 filesystem. This allows most
- of the features of the Mac filesystem on an otherwise plain ISO-9660 disc.
- It's not clear how many of the software products in section (6-1) take
- advantage of this, but "mkhybrid" (section (6-1-32)) and MacImage (section
- (6-2-10)) seem to. Section (3-5-3) has a URL to an Apple tech note with
- implementation details.
-
- A common way to construct a disc for the Mac and PC is as a "hybrid" disc
- that has both an ISO-9660 filesystem and an HFS filesystem. To save space,
- the data itself is shared by both sections of the disc. This is possible
- because the ISO-9660 directory entries use an absolute block offset on the
- disc, so they can point at data residing in the HFS filesystem.
-
- There are various applications that will do HFS/ISO-9660 hybrids.
- Roxio's Toast for the Mac and "mkhybrid" for the PC are two examples.
- Search for "hybrid" in the list of software in section (6-1) for more
- examples.
-
- The issue of Joliet vs. Rock Ridge can also be solved, by including both
- kinds of extensions on the same disc. The "mkhybrid" program can include
- Joliet, Rock Ridge, and HFS all on the same disc. You can even have files
- appear on one kind but not the other, and rename files on the fly, allowing
- you to have a "readme.txt" with different contents for Mac, UNIX, and
- Windows.
-
-
- Subject: [3-36] How do I put "hidden tracks" and negative indices on audio CDs?
- (2001/06/26)
-
- With a little searching you can find an audio CD that will cause your CD
- player to show a negative track time when one track finishes and the next
- begins. The negative sections are usually filled with silence, but some
- rare discs will have material in them. If you seek directly to the track,
- you don't see (or hear) the negative-time section.
-
- The trick here is also described in section (3-14). You can specify the
- start position of an audio track anywhere within the track. The start
- position is at time index 00:00 (in minutes and seconds, MM:SS), so the
- music before the start point is usually displayed with negative time values.
- When you seek directly to a track, the player jumps to time index 00:00, but
- when you play through from a previous track you hear the entire track.
-
- When using CDRWIN-style cue sheets, the actual start of the track is at
- "index 00", and the place where the player seeks to is "index 01". The The
- distance between the indices is called the pre-gap. The Red Book standard
- requires that index 01 in track 01 be at least two seconds (150 sectors)
- from the start of the CD.
-
- You can specify additional index markers, but most CD players will simply
- ignore them. Some CD-ROM games have tried to use the index markers as a
- form of copy protection, because they won't get copied automatically by
- many programs.
-
-
- If you want to create your own discs with "hidden tracks", you need a program
- that gives you full control over where the index markers go (CDRWIN is one
- such program). Combine two (or more) tracks with an audio editor into a
- single file. Specify the file as a single track in the cue sheet, set
- "index 00" to time zero, and set "index 01" to a point right after the
- "hidden" song finishes. There are other ways to approach this, but this
- is probably the most straightforward.
-
- It should be mentioned that the only truly "hidden" track is in track 1.
- Most CD players will play the entire disc, from index 01 on track 1,
- straight through to the end, so any tracks you try to "hide" in the
- middle of the disc are simply difficult to seek to. The only way to play
- audio tucked into the pre-gap in track 1 on most players is to hold down
- the rewind button.
-
- For more information about unusual audio CDs, see "CD Oddities" at
- http://www.turbine.com/wj/oddcd/.
-
-
- Subject: [3-37] Do I need to worry about viruses?
- (1998/09/11)
-
- Absolutely. Infected CD-ROMs are every bit as nasty as infected floppies,
- if not worse: you can't disinfect the source media. It is prudent to
- scan your files before creating a CD-ROM for distribution, and it's not
- a bad idea to scan the CD-ROM afterward (in case somebody has cleverly
- infected your CD writing software).
-
- The dangers of boot sector viruses on bootable CD-ROMs are probably low.
- Because the boot sector is created directly by the recording software, and
- can't be modified after it has been written, the opportunity for infection
- is small.
-
-
- Subject: [3-38] How do I cover up a bad audio track on a CD-R?
- (1998/09/11)
-
- You don't. With a CD-ROM you could use multisession writes to hide
- unwanted data, but you can't create multisession audio CDs. (Well, you can
- create them, but nothing outside of a CD-ROM drive will be able to play the
- tracks outside the first session.)
-
- On CD-RW media, it might be possible to overwrite an individual track. You
- would need software that supported this capability. Erasing the disc and
- starting over is probably easier.
-
-
- Subject: [3-39] How do I duplicate this hard-to-copy game?
- (2001/12/18)
-
- Requests for information on how to copy recent games occasionally sprout
- up on the newsgroups. Generally the publisher has employed some form
- of copy protection that prevents the disc from being duplicated easily.
- If you try to play the game from the duplicate, the game will usually act
- as if the CD-ROM weren't present and tell you to insert it.
-
- Most publishers are well aware that there is no such thing as an
- unbreakable copy protection scheme. It is possible though to implement
- a method effective enough to slow the tide. If you don't believe that,
- start counting posts the next time a popular game with decent protection
- is released. See section (2-4) for some technical details, and section
- (3-42) for a discussion of why you can't write a general-purpose disc
- copier that works for everything.
-
- If you're looking for information, the most appropriate places to search
- are "warez" newsgroups and web sites. Searching the net for tips is a good
- way to get started. Be forewarned that any "cracks" you download may very
- well also be viruses, and that if you give away or accept a copy of the
- disc from someone else you are probably breaking the law.
-
- Aiding and abeting the illegal distribution of copyrighted works is not part
- of this document's charter. There are plenty of newsgroups and web sites
- devoted to the subject, so please don't waste bandwidth in "legitimate"
- forums asking for cracks. A search engine such as http://www.google.com/
- will turn up many sites with such information.
-
- Incidentally, the government of the USA and several other countries are
- starting to crack down on illegal trading of software and digital video.
- See http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2001/December/01_crm_643.htm for a press
- release on a December 11 2001 crackdown.
-
-
- Subject: [3-40] Should I erase or format a disc? How?
- (2001/03/18)
-
- First and foremost: you do not need to format a disc unless you're using a
- packet writing program like DirectCD. If you're running a program to create
- a CD, chances are good that you don't need to format it. If you're using
- "drive letter access", i.e. treating the CD-R or CD-RW like a big floppy
- disk, then you do need to format it.
-
- Simple rule of thumb: don't format it. Most software that needs a formatted
- disc will format it for you as needed.
-
- Formatting and erasing are different things. Formatting prepares a disc
- for recording. On a CD-R it writes a few basic things, on CD-RW it may
- write to most of the disc. The fixed-packet formatting that DirectCD does
- for CD-RW discs takes about 50 minutes on a 2x-speed rewritable drive.
-
- Erasing, which can only be done to CD-RW media, restores the disc to a
- pristine state. If you want to erase a disc, use the software that came
- with your CD-ReWritable drive. Somewhere in the army of applications and
- mountain of menus is the command you're looking for.
-
- The difference between "erase" and "quick erase" is that the former erases
- the entire disc, while the latter just stomps on the Table of Contents
- (TOC). It's like erasing the directory off of a floppy disk. The file
- data is still there, but since there's nothing pointing to it, the disc
- appears empty. (Some people have asked if it's possible to recover data
- from a quick-erased disc. Acodisc can do this; see section (4-35).)
-
- The difference between "format" and "fast format" (such as is offered on
- the HP8100/Sony CRX100) is of a different nature. Both format the entire
- disc, and both operate at the same speed, but the "fast" format allows you
- to use the drive before formatting has completed. After a few minutes, you
- are allowed to access the drive while the formatting process continues in
- the background.
-
- Incidentally, most conventional (pre-mastering) software will refuse to record
- on a disc that has been formatted for packet writing. In some cases the
- error message may be a confusing remark that insists the disc isn't writable.
-
-
- Subject: [3-41] How do I equalize the volume for tracks from different sources?
- (2003/08/01)
-
- A common problem when creating an audio CD compiled from many different
- sources is that the sound is at different volume levels. This can be
- slight or, after you've cranked up the volume to hear the first track, very
- much the opposite of slight.
-
- There are actually two issues that determine how loud the music sounds.
- The first is the signal amplitude. Put simply, if you open a WAV file,
- this is how close to maximum the squiggly line gets. You can adjust the WAV
- file so that the highest amplitude is at maximum with the "normalize peak"
- function of a sound editor. Some programs, such as Roxio's Spin Doctor,
- may even do this for you automatically.
-
- The second major issue is the dynamic range compression. This differs
- from data rate compression in that it doesn't make the WAV file smaller.
- Instead, it can make the quiet parts louder and the loud parts quieter.
-
- A CD-DA has a dynamic range of about 96dB. If a symphony is recorded with
- a range of more than 110dB, it has to be compressed to fit on a CD-DA.
- In practice, you don't want whispers to be inaudible and shouts to be
- deafening, so the audio is often squeezed into an even narrower range.
- Radio stations often compress their broadcasts "up" so that music can be
- heard more clearly by listeners in cars or work environments.
-
- (According to Ken Pohlmann's _Principles of Digital Audio_, 4th edition,
- page 35, ideal 16-bit quantization of a sinusoidal waveform is 6.02n+1.76
- decibels, or 98.08dB. Using "dithering" techniques, it's possible to
- extend the effective resolution well beyond this, because of the way
- the ear perceives sound. There is an *excellent* introductory article
- at http://www.digido.com/ditheressay.html. Compression is more often
- employed on pop music recordings, where louder is better, than something
- like classical music, where accurate reproduction is desirable.)
-
- To make a CD that sounds like it has equal volume across all tracks, you
- need to have the average sound level uniform across all tracks and have the
- peak volume be about the same on all tracks. One program that does
- essentially this is Audiograbber v1.40 and later, available as shareware
- from http://www.audiograbber.com-us.net/. (As of v1.41, you went into
- "Normalize Settings" and hit the "Advanced" button.) The tool is a little
- clumsy for serious audio mastering, but should do fine for preparing a
- "mix" CD that you'll be listening to in your car.
-
- Another tool is "WAV file leveller", at http://home.plompy.co.uk/.
-
- Some programs approximate compression by letting you normalize against
- average RMS power. In this case, you are using a value that more closely
- matches the apparent loudness of the recording.
-
- If you aren't dissuaded yet, http://www.digido.com/compression.html has
- an excellent article on compression, intended primarily for the budding
- recording artist but a good general reference nonetheless.
-
- http://www.prorec.com/prorec/articles.nsf/files/8A133F52D0FD71AB86256C2E005DAF1C
- has an excellent article entitled "Over the Limit" about the Louder is
- Better phenomenon in professional recording. The author examines the
- progress of the trend by analyzing clipping and power levels in five
- different Rush CDs recorded from 1984 to 2002.
-
- Sidebar: "dB" is the abbreviation for "decibel", a signal strength ratio
- measured on a logarithmic scale. In a WAV editor like Cool Edit, which
- can show the sound level in dB, the signal level doubles every time you
- add 6dB, and the "loudness" doubles every 10dB. This is different from
- signal power levels, which double every 3dB (what you see in a WAV editor
- is analogous to voltage, not power). Detailed information is available
- from the Acoustics FAQ at http://www.campanellaacoustics.com/faq.htm.
- See also http://www.ews64.com/mcdecibels.html and
- http://www.modrec.com/about/excerpt.php. There is a comparison table at
- http://www.gcaudio.com/Archives/volatgeloudness.htm that breaks things
- down nicely.
-
-
- Subject: [3-42] How do I make a bit-for-bit copy of a disc?
- (2002/12/09)
-
- A commonly posed question from the newsgroups: "what software can do
- bit-for-bit copies?" The expectation is software that can make an exact
- copy of the original.
-
- There isn't any. If it helps to have a (convenient albeit somewhat
- inaccurate) mental image, picture a long string of bits arranged in a
- spiral. There are bits at the start of the spiral that you can't copy (the
- lead-in area), there are bits outside the spiral that you can usually copy
- if you request them ("raw" MODE-1 CD-ROM ECC and sector goop), and there
- are bits *under* the spiral that are blurry and hard to see (the subcode
- data).
-
- What's more, there are copy protection features, such as *physically* damaged
- blocks, that a recorder isn't generally capable of writing. Other tricks,
- such as out-of-specification track lengths, can't be duplicated by most
- CD recorders because the firmware refuses to write them.
-
- In no event can you guarantee an exact duplicate of the level 1 ECC (CIRC)
- encoding. In practice this doesn't matter, since no CD-ROM drive provides
- an interface for reading it directly.
-
- Making a "bit-for-bit" copy of a disc would require reading the data at the
- lowest possible level, something that no production CD-ROM drive is capable
- of doing. Even if it were possible, there aren't any CD recorders that can
- write that sort of data.
-
- Because of these limitations, you have to read a sector of data as a sector
- of data, not as a collection of frames scattered over half the circumference
- of the disc. The best you can do currently is "raw DAO-96" (section (3-51)),
- which reads the subcode data along with the the sector data.
-
- Bear in mind that CD-ROM drives and CD recorders were designed for people
- who want to read and write data, not decipher arcane standards documents
- and perform their own error correction. Creating exact one-off copies was
- not a major consideration of the original design.
-
- In general, however, you don't *need* a "bit-perfect" duplicate of the
- original. If what you're copying is a simple MODE-1 CD-ROM, you can make
- an "identical" copy by reading the sectors off the original and writing
- them to a duplicate. For most situations this is good enough: you have
- copied the bits that matter.
-
- On the other hand, if it's a copy-protected CD-ROM with index markers in
- strange places, you have to use software and hardware that can see the
- "blurry bits" reliably and copy them.
-
- See also sections (2-43), (3-1-1), (3-18), (3-39), and (6-1-49).
-
-
- Subject: [3-43] How do I put punctuation or lower case in CD-ROM volume labels?
- (1999/06/05)
-
- The name of a CD-ROM is determined by the CD-ROM volume label. This
- determines how the disc shows up on the Mac or Windows.
-
- The ISO-9660 standard limits the characters in the volume name to the same
- set of characters allowed in a filename, namely A-Z, 0-9, '.', and '_'.
- Some programs enforce strict adherence to the standard, while others are
- more relaxed.
-
- For example, if you wanted to create a disc with Nero that had a hyphen in
- the volume name, you would go into the "file options" and change the
- Character Set to "ASCII". Nero will then allow a broader range of
- characters. Other programs may or may not have similar features.
-
- Remember that standards are guidelines, not laws enforced by threat of
- punishment. You are welcome to create discs that deviate from the standard
- in any way you choose. The only price you will pay is that, if you stray
- too far from the standard, your disc may not be readable by everyone. For
- the specific case of a volume label, deviations are pretty harmless.
-
-
- Subject: [3-44] How do I extract audio tracks from an "enhanced" CD on the Mac?
- (2001/10/02)
-
- Applications like "Toast" insist on showing the data track only. You can
- play the audio tracks, but you can't seem to extract them.
-
- SoundJam MP from http://www.soundjam.com/ is reported to do the trick.
- The CD-ROM toolkit from FWB (http://www.fwb.com/) might also be of use.
-
-
- Subject: [3-45] How do I disable DirectCD for Windows?
- (2001/01/06)
-
- There are two basic approaches: (1) run the uninstall program, or (2) make
- changes to several entries in the Windows registry.
-
- You CANNOT disable it by killing a task.
- You CANNOT disable it by un-checking it in msconfig.
- You CANNOT disable it by removing it from the system StartUp list.
-
- All these really do is stop the DirectCD control interface from running.
- The icon is gone from the system tray, but DirectCD itself is still active,
- which you can verify by inserting an unfinalized packet-written disc. If
- DirectCD were actually disabled, the disc would be unreadable.
-
- Writing data to such a disc without the user interface component active
- can lead to data corruption, because some of the safeguards are no longer
- in place. It's like you've taken the steering wheel off the car while
- it's still rolling.
-
- If you do choose to use one of the "easy" methods, you will probably be okay
- so long as you don't try to write to a disc with packet writing.
-
- DirectCD puts some drivers in C:\Windows\System\Iosubsys\. The set appears
- to be CDUDFRW.VXD, CDUDF.VXD, CDRPWD.VXD, and CDR4VSD.VXD. If you are
- having trouble un-installing DirectCD, check for the presence of these
- files, and rename the extension to ".VX_" if found.
-
-
- NOTE: the DirectCD icon in the system tray is different from and independent
- of the "Create CD" icon that Easy CD Creator 4 adds to the system tray. You
- can get rid of that by right-clicking on it and telling it not to load.
-
-
- Subject: [3-46] How do I specify the order of files (e.g. sorting) on ISO-9660?
- (2004/02/16)
-
- Generally speaking, you don't. The ISO-9660 specification requires that the
- files appear in sorted order. Modern operating systems will sort the files
- for you anyway, so changing the file order won't usually do much for you.
- Packet-written (UDF) discs behave differently.
-
- One situation where sorting does matter is when creating an "MP3 CD", i.e.
- a CD-ROM filled with MP3 files that will be played by a CD or DVD player.
- Getting the songs in the order you want is usually accomplished by
- prepending digits to the front of the name, e.g. "001" for the first song,
- "002" for the next, and so on.
-
- It is possible, if you don't mind creating discs that violate the standard,
- to specify a sorting order without modifying the file name. MP3BR Imager,
- from http://www.mp3br.com/, can do this for you. Just make sure you test the
- discs for compatibility with your equipment before you get too carried away.
-
-
- Subject: [3-47] How do I put a password on a CD-ROM?
- (2000/03/14)
-
- Encrypt the data on it. See section (3-19) for options.
-
-
- Subject: [3-48] Can I record an audio CD a few tracks at a time?
- (2000/04/11)
-
- That depends on what you're trying to accomplish. There are two issues
- that complicate matters:
-
- (1) Most audio CD players only play tracks from the first session on
- the disc. (Most CD-ROM drives will play all sessions.)
- (2) Most audio CD players only play tracks from a closed session.
- (In general, only a CD recorder can play from an open session.)
-
- Suppose you record three tracks onto an audio CD, using track-at-once
- recording. If you don't close the session, you can add more tracks, but
- you can't play the disc. If you close the session, you can play the disc,
- but you can't add more tracks.
-
- Some people have CD players that will play songs from every session. If
- you do, and compatibility with other players isn't important, you can
- write each group of tracks into its own session. The down side of this
- approach is that there is an appreciable amount of overhead when opening
- a new session (23MB for the first and 14MB for each additional one).
-
- If your hard drive has enough space, you can just keep the WAV files on
- the drive, and burn the disc all at once. If it doesn't, you can write the
- tracks to a CD-R or CD-RW disc as WAV files on CD-ROM, and record from there.
- Write a new CD-R or CD-RW every time you get more tracks. (The advantage
- to using CD-ROM is that additional error correction is used.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-49] How do I copy DVDs onto CD-R?
- (2002/11/15)
-
- It isn't possible to take the contents of a DVD-Video or DVD-ROM and
- record the whole thing onto a CD-R, unless the DVD is nearly empty.
- The capacity of DVD discs is considerably greater. Generally speaking,
- you can't play DVD content from a CD-R disc anyway, because the DVD drive
- needs to read encryption keys from outside the filesystem area.
-
- You could, of course, capture the video from a DVD-Video disc with a video
- capture board, re-encode it with MPEG-1, and write that as a VideoCD.
- The quality would be VHS-grade though. (You can get better results
- with MP3 audio and MPEG-4 video, but the process is a little convoluted.
- See http://www.digital-digest.com/dvd/support/dvd2mpeg4.html.) The
- next section talks about some ads you might have seen for products that
- do this.
-
- You may have heard of DivX (sometimes "DivX ;-)"). Originally the name
- for a limited-playback DVD system, it now usually refers to MPEG-4 encoding
- of DVD video. See http://www.divx-digest.com/help.html for more details.
-
- If you're only interested in the audio portion of a DVD-Video, you can
- extract the AC3 audio directly from the .VOB file, using some freely
- available utilities (notably "ac3dec" and the elusive "DeCSS"). You will
- need to convert the audio from 48KHz to 44.1KHz. You can also capture
- it under Windows with Total Recorder (6-2-19).
-
- The story is the same with DVD-ROM: you can probably copy it to a CD-R if
- it will fit. If the contents only took up about 650MB, though, it probably
- wouldn't have been shipped on a DVD-ROM.
-
-
- Subject: [3-49-1] I heard about software that copies DVDs with a CD recorder!
- (2002/12/21)
-
- I'm guessing you've also heard of ways to get rich by sending money
- to other people, legal ways to get your bad credit history erased, and
- drug-free side-effect-free low-cost super cures made from all natural
- ingredients on distant tropical islands.
-
- They're all nonsense. I can't help you if you believe in the above, but I
- can speak to copying DVDs with a CD recorder. Here's a piece from a message
- that was spammed at me (spelling and grammar errors left uncorrected):
-
- COPY ANY DVD MOVIE
-
- With our revolutionary software you can copy virtually any DVD Movie
- using your existing equiptment! Conventional DVD copying
- equiptment can cost thousands of $$$
-
- Our revolutionary software cost less than the price of 2 DVD Movies!
-
- If you go to the web site, it goes on to say:
-
- Learn How To Burn DVD's onto Regular CD-R Discs and watch your new
- movies on Any DVD Player, not just the computer DVD.
- [...]
- No DVD Drive Required!!!
-
- Another, possibly unrelated, site says:
-
- With detailed, easy to follow, step-by-step instructions, you can
- BURN your own DVD Video using nothing more than our software and
- your CD-R.
- [...]
- o No DVD Burner Required
- o Superior Reproduction Quality
-
- It has a link for their "frequently asked questions" document, but you have
- to give them your e-mail address to get it. Any company that refuses to
- give you information until you submit to their spam list is best avoided.
-
- Let's start with the facts:
-
- (1) You can't read a DVD in a CD-ROM drive. DVD requires a laser at
- a different wavelength; the disc has a different physical format;
- the disc has a different logical format. A firmware update is
- not going to make this work, so don't expect that installing new
- software is going to help.
- (2) You can't put a full DVD on a CD-R disc. DVD movies are typically
- around 8GB, which is roughly 11x as much as you can put on a CD-R.
- (3) Many DVD players can't read CD-R discs. This is because of the
- different laser wavelength. DVD player manufacturers have found
- several ways around this, but many players just can't handle CD-R.
- (4) You can't easily duplicate the blocks with the security keys. They
- live outside the filesystem area. The only way to get the MPEG
- video off in a playable format is to create a copy with the CSS
- encryption removed. This requires either stripping the encryption
- with software (DeCSS) or hacking the device driver to get the video
- after the hardware has decrypted it. Both methods are, as of the
- end of 2002, the subject of lawsuits in the USA because of DMCA law,
- which makes such things illegal to write, sell, or even use.
-
- Products like "DVD Wizard" and "DVD-Copy 2.1" cannot possibly do all
- that they claim. The best they can do is transcode the video into a
- lesser format. This requires ripping the MPEG-2 video off the DVD using a
- DVD-ROM drive, stripping the encryption, re-encoding the video in MPEG-1,
- and writing it to CD-R as a VideoCD. You will be going from 720x480
- video recorded at up to 10.08Mbits/sec down to 352x200 video recorded at
- 1.5Mbits/sec. Instead of Dolby 5.1 you will have low-bit-rate stereo.
- On an 80 minute disc, you can store about 80 minutes of MPEG-1 video,
- so nearly all movies will require two or more discs.
-
- This software will let you create a movie that could be played back in
- computers or *some* DVD players -- not all DVD players support CD-R media,
- and not all will play VideoCD -- but at roughly VHS quality, and without
- any of the features that make DVDs special. Most notably, you will lose
- all of the menus, audio options, and special features. You will not be
- burning "DVD Video", and in some parts of the world (most notably the USA)
- you will be breaking the law even if the copy is for personal use.
-
- Software that does this sort of thing can be found, for free, on various
- sites on the Internet. (Because of the legal issues, it isn't always
- available in one place for long.) If you really want low-quality MPEG
- editions, save your money and search the web for DVD copiers or converters,
- and download the software for free instead of giving money to spammers.
- (The previous section has a couple of links that might be useful.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-50] How do I copy Mac, UNIX, or "hybrid" CD-ROMs from Windows?
- (2001/03/03)
-
- A program that copies the entire disc as an image should work. Don't
- try to copy it as a collection of files.
-
- You can create a hybrid HFS (Mac), Rock Ridge (UNIX), and Joliet (Windows)
- CD-ROM with "mkhybrid" in section (6-1-32). The output of the program is
- a simple ISO-9660 image file. It stands to reason that you should be
- able to copy such discs as easily as you can create them.
-
- The same applies to copying arbitrary discs from the Mac, or any other
- platform -- just copy it as a disc, and you should be fine.
-
- If you're trying to copy a game, and it doesn't work, see (3-39).
-
-
- Subject: [3-51] How do I copy something in "RAW" mode? What's DAO-96?
- (2002/12/09)
-
- A sector on an audio CD holds 2352 bytes, enough for 1/75 of a second
- of stereo sound. A sector on a MODE-1 CD-ROM holds 2048 bytes of data.
- The 304 "lost" bytes are used for sector addressing, synchronization,
- and error correction.
-
- If you read a MODE-1 CD-ROM sector in "cooked" mode, you get 2048 bytes
- of data. When you write that to a CD-R or CD-RW, the error correction
- bytes are reconstructed. If you read that sector in "raw" mode, you get all
- 2352 bytes of data. If you simply wrote those bytes to a CD-R, any errors
- that slipped past the CIRC encoding while reading would be propagated,
- and could result in generation loss (see sections (2-17) and (3-18)).
-
- There are times when you don't *want* to have the error correction
- reconstructed. For example, some games deliberately distort the error
- correction bytes as a form of copy protection. See section (2-4).
-
- The recording software has the option of error-correcting the 2048 bytes
- of CD-ROM data and even regenerating the ECC data. Doing either reduces
- the risk of generation loss; doing both eliminates the risk by effectively
- doing a "cooked" read and write. (Apparently some drives will error-correct
- CD-ROM data for you even in "raw" mode.)
-
- To copy a disc in "raw" mode, you need the right reader, the right writer,
- and the right software. Programs like CloneCD specialize in "raw" copies,
- but require that the CD-ROM drive used to read discs and the recorder used
- to write them support "raw" reads and writes. The web page for CloneCD
- (6-1-49) is a good place to look for a list of capable hardware.
-
- "RAW DAO-96" refers to a method for writing "raw" 2352 byte sectors with 96
- bytes of associated P-W subcode channel data (section (2-6)). This is useful
- for copying discs with CD+G, CD-Text, and certain forms of copy protection.
- "DAO" refers to its use in combination with disc-at-once recording.
-
- There's also "RAW DAO-94", which is the same as DAO-96 except that the
- two bytes of Q channel CRC data are always generated by the recorder, and
- "RAW DAO-16", which includes only the P-Q subcode channels.
-
-
- Subject: [3-52] How do I do cross-fades between audio tracks?
- (2000/12/02)
-
- A "cross-fade" is a smooth transition from one track into another. If done
- properly, with compatible music, the tracks appear to blend into one another.
-
- Some of the fancier recording applications, such as Sound Forge
- (http://www.sonicfoundry.com/) and Waveburner (6-1-55), will do cross-fades.
- An "Advanced CrossFading" plug-in for Winamp can do them; set the output
- device to a file on disc (with a "disk writer plug-in"?), and play the
- music you want to record.
-
- It's important to use disc-at-once recording when writing the tracks to
- avoid having two-second gaps inserted. See section (3-26).
-
-
- Subject: [3-53] How do I create a CD with my favorite songs on it?
- (2000/12/02)
-
- If you want to create a CD that includes songs from several other CDs,
- there are two basic approaches:
-
- (1) Use a program, like Easy CD Creator Deluxe (6-1-26), that allows you
- to select tracks from multiple CDs on the layout screen. The "wizard"
- can walk you through the process.
- (2) Extract the tracks you want to your hard drive, perhaps with a
- program like Exact Audio Copy (6-2-12), and then write them all at once.
-
- The former is a little easier, and requires less disk space. The latter
- allows you to use disc-at-once recording, which prevents the recorder from
- inserting a two-second gap between each track.
-
-
- Subject: [3-54] How do I record directly onto CD from a microphone?
- (2001/03/02)
-
- If you have a stand-alone audio CD recorder, this should be straightforward.
- Either you have a microphone input or you don't.
-
- On a computer, you probably don't want to do this. The greatest advantage
- of using a computer-attached recorder is that you can edit the result
- before recording it. CD-R is write-once media, so if you make a mistake,
- you can't fix it later.
-
- If you're determined to do this, Roxio's Spin Doctor (part of Easy CD
- Creator) can do what you want. Connect the microphone to the input on
- the PC sound card, start up the software, and record when ready.
-
- The situation on non-PC platforms is similar: you can do it if your
- software supports it.
-
-
- Subject: [3-55] Is it okay to record a CD from MP3?
- (2001/04/19)
-
- Yes, though the quality won't be as good as if you had recorded directly
- from the original CD.
-
- MP3 is a "lossy" compression format, meaning that it gets its exceptional
- compression ratios by throwing some of the data away. (MP3 can get a
- 10:1 reduction with hardly any degradation in audible quality; "lossless"
- compression is hard-pressed to do better than 2:1 on 16-bit samples.)
- The clever part about MP3 is the way it figures out what parts of the
- audio to throw away and what to keep, based on a model of human hearing.
-
- Because it's a lossy format, every time you compress something you lose some
- of the quality forever. The smaller you compress it, the more you lose.
- The loss is more easily audible on some music than others, and if your
- equipment (or your ears) aren't very good you may not notice it at all.
-
- If you like to copy CDs by ripping them into MP3 format and then recording
- them to MP3, be aware that your copies aren't quite as good as your
- originals. At 160Kbps it's going to be hard to notice, but at 64Kbps it
- should be easy to tell the difference between the original and the copy.
-
- (Side note: if you want to do a double-blind test, play the original and
- the duplicate in random order for somebody else, and ask them if they can
- identify the original music. The test isn't to tell that the discs sound
- *different*, but rather to figure out which disc sounds *better*.)
-
- For more information about lossy and lossless audio compression, see:
-
- - http://www.faqs.org/faqs/compression-faq/
- - http://www.mpeg.org/
- - http://www.mp3.com/
-
- For some tutorials on converting between MP3 and other formats, see
- section (3-27).
-
-
- Subject: [3-56] How can I test a disc image before recording?
- (2002/02/25)
-
- You have a few options.
-
- You can do a trivial check of an ISO disc image with WinImage. See
- section (6-2-2).
-
- Under Linux, you can mount it via the "loopback" filesystem, e.g.:
- "mount ./cdimg.iso /mnt/test -t iso9660 -o loop".
-
- Under DOS/Windows, you can "SUBST" a directory to make it look like a
- drive, e.g. "SUBST J: \goodies\NewCD" will make the contents of
- "\goodies\NewCD" appear to be mounted on the J: drive. This is a useful
- way to test autorun.inf files.
-
- A more robust approach under Windows is to use a CD emulator.
- These programs usually use their own proprietary disc formats, but
- some converters are available (e.g. http://www.bluebitter.de/),
- and some can mount ISO images directly. Examples include
- Microtest Virtual CD (http://www.virtualcd-online.com/), Paragon
- CD Emulator (http://www.cdrom-emulator.com/), and Daemon Tools
- (http://www.daemon-tools.com/).
-
-
- Subject: [3-57] How do I clear the "read-only" flag under Windows?
- (2003/03/25)
-
- If you write files to a CD-R with conventional recording and then try
- to copy them back, under Windows the files will all have their "read
- only" flags set. This can be annoying for documents you want to update.
-
- The files aren't written to the disc as "read only". There isn't any such
- permission flag in the filesystem. They're simply presented that way
- by Microsoft operating systems. Mac OS deals with this in a nicer way,
- showing unlocked files on write-protected media, rather than the dopey
- Microsoft approach of showing write-protected files on unlocked media.
-
- You can avoid this situation entirely by using packet writing (where
- you just copy files to the disc like a big floppy, e.g. with DirectCD),
- which preserves the file attributes, or by using backup software, which
- will restore the files to their original state. Stuffing the files into
- a ZIP archive works too, but may be less convenient than other approaches.
-
- If you've already got the read-only files, changing them back to read-write
- isn't too hard. Some approaches:
-
- If you're using Win2K or WinXP, right-click on the top-most folder(s),
- and un-check the read-only box. You will be asked if you want to apply
- the change to all files and folders in the folder. Say "yes".
-
- For DOS or older versions of Windows, from a DOS prompt run "ATTRIB -R *.*
- /S" on every subdirectory with read-only files in it.
-
- If you prefer a Windows application, try "ReadOnly" from
- http://www.sente.co.uk/downloads.htm. They also have a more sophisticated
- application called "FlagRASH".
-
- If you can boot into Linux, su to root, mount the volume as vfat, cd
- to the directory in question, and do "find . -print | xargs chmod +w"
- to enable write permission for all files in the current directory and in
- all subdirectories. If you've got the GNU utilities, use "find . -print0
- | xargs -0 chmod +w" instead, because it'll work correctly on files with
- spaces in the names. (Of course, if you're a Linux user, you could just use
- mkisofs with the appropriate options and have Rock Ridge file permissions
- that match the originals, but this is a Windows question.)
-
-
- Subject: [3-58] How do I share a CD recorder across a network?
- (2002/12/02)
-
- There is no general way to access a CD recorder on a remote machine.
- You need to have software running on the machine with the recorder.
- This might be something as simple as DirectCD, to provide a filesystem
- that Windows can write files directly to, or something fancy that accepts
- disc images and queues them for recording.
-
- Ahead's NeroNET (http://www.nero.com/) provides a client/server model
- for sharing CD recorders. See also CD Studio+ (section (6-1-6)).
-
-
- Subject: [3-59] How do I write a large file across multiple discs?
- (2003/03/05)
-
- This is usually referred to as "spanning", and is a standard feature of
- most backup software (see section (6-7)). With a little extra effort,
- you can accomplish the same thing with standard software.
-
- One approach under Windows is to create a ZIP archive with WinZip
- (http://www.winzip.com/), and then use the "Split" item on the Actions
- menu to break the archive into pieces small enough to fit onto CD-Rs.
- The feature was originally created to split archives across multiple
- floppy discs, but it works just as well with 650MB pieces.
-
- On a UNIX system, use the "split" command, e.g. "split -b 650m myfile".
- Write each file to a separate disc, and combine them later with "cat".
- These commands have been a standard part of UNIX for just about forever,
- so you should have no trouble finding them.
-
-
- Subject: [3-60] What's the safest, most reliable way to write data to CD-R?
- (2004/04/15)
-
- The best approach is the one that leaves you with a 100% readable disc
- today and a few years down the road. The key ingredients are:
-
- Use quality media
- Saving a few pennies today could result in big headaches later on.
- Some of the cheap bulk brands are good-quality "unbranded" media
- from reliable manufacturers, but many have poor construction and
- will not last. Section (7-4-1) has some thoughts on which are good
- and which aren't. Stick to 74-minute or 80-minute discs. 90- and
- 99-minute discs are not as reliable.
- Use conventional pre-mastering, not packet writing
- Packet writing ("drive letter access") is easy to use but files can
- be "deleted" even on CD-R media, making them difficult to recover.
- Sometimes open discs will Go Funny and becomes unreadable. (See section
- (6-3-2) for a "reality check".) You want to gather the files and
- record them all at once, not drag-and-drop them onto the disc as if
- it were a floppy.
- Use CD-R, not CD-RW
- If you don't want your data to be erased, don't put it on erasable
- media. If you must use packet writing, you are less likely to have
- data loss with CD-R, because nothing is ever really deleted or
- overwritten. Also, some concerns have been raised about CD-RW media
- longevity.
- Use disc-at-once recording
- Leaving a session or disc open creates the possibility of some other
- device or program screwing up the TOC and making the disc unreadable.
- Multi-session discs create opportunities for confusion.
- Test
- Software like Ahead's Nero (6-1-28) can automatically verify the data
- after recording completes. Other suggestions are in section (3-22).
-
- These rules also result in discs with the broadest possible compatibility, so
- you should also follow them if you're planning to distribute files on CD-R.
-
- If you're planning to store the data for an extended period, such as for
- an archival backup, you should write the same data to two different kinds
- of media and store the discs separately.
-
- See also section (7-27) for advice on handling and storing CDs.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [ continued in part 3 of the FAQ ]
-
-