On 1 July 2012 00:08, JD <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
You can indeed make an image of an audio CD, although it's not an ISO9660 image as there's no filesystem as such on an audio CD. What you have instead is something known as a "TOC", or "Table of Contents" file which is written out as ASCII text. I suspect K3B has created a raw image for you, but either not written out the TOC or you've not understood its significance.
I can see where you are trying to go, but I don't think you're going to find a solution that's very well supported by media players. Most of us create a directory for each CD then put the transcoded audio files, plus any cover art images, playlists, etc. in there.
-- On 06/30/2012 03:58 PM, Andy Blanchard wrote:
Thanx Andy.
I do know what wav files are.
I was hoping to delete them and use just the one
file which krb says is the image. I was under the
impression it would produce a .img file. But I was
disappointed. Apparently becase an audio CD is
made of multiple tracks, once cannot create a .img
or a .iso of it.
You can indeed make an image of an audio CD, although it's not an ISO9660 image as there's no filesystem as such on an audio CD. What you have instead is something known as a "TOC", or "Table of Contents" file which is written out as ASCII text. I suspect K3B has created a raw image for you, but either not written out the TOC or you've not understood its significance.
I can see where you are trying to go, but I don't think you're going to find a solution that's very well supported by media players. Most of us create a directory for each CD then put the transcoded audio files, plus any cover art images, playlists, etc. in there.
Andy
The only person to have all his work done by Friday was Robinson Crusoe
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