Oh I get'yah! Lololol! Mine are all data CD's, and I thought that's what you were getting at. Fwah! If mine were audio cd's there'd be no way. If you have good quality wav or cda formatted disks, then by all means, pack those succer's down at least into mp3, ogg if you prefer. I like both here myself, having gone the laptop route as you have, but mp3 is more tradeable if you like to pass your files around. Until the mp3 players support ogg, that's how it'll be. I guess the best you can do is make sample files and see what you think of varying formats and compressions. ----- Original Message ----- From: Cheryl Homiak <chomiak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca> Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2003 11:51 AM Subject: Re: Durability of burned cds with .ogg files > Well, yeah, but you can get several regular cds' content on one burned data cd. > I wouldn't go the route of hard drives; just think how much stuff you'd lose > when a hard drive malfunctions. That happened to me a year ago with a hard > drive; fortunately, it gave me enough warning to transfer my linux system to a > new drive before the end--you don't always get that kind of warning though. At > least if a data cd malfunctions it's not most of your collection. > Sometimes you can get really good deals if you watch places like office depot > for sales of 200-cd packs or spools. Only the last time I tried to use the > office depot site, I couldn't complete my order and had to call it in. But there > are deals out there. > I give my jewel cases for regular cds away to other people now because I like > the binders so > much better. > > Cheryl > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup > >