![]() Soon you'll be swooning to Boyz II Men and Jesus Jones tracks on your super sweet new CD. Highlight the playlist and then click the Burn Disk icon in the top-right corner. First, click on the iTunes > Preferences > Burning and select "Audio CD." Next, arrange all the songs you'd like to burn into a playlist (you can only burn from a playlist). If you want to burn an audio CD, you'll have to do that from iTunes (Opens in a new window) (you can also do that on the Windows version of iTunes). Choose File > Burn and follow directions from there. Drag and drop the files into the disc icon on your desktop. If you're burning data, just slip that writeable bad boy in. Conversely, you can also use iTunes, which we'll explore below. Then when you're happy with it, just click the "Start" button. You can find more specifics about this process here (Opens in a new window). This will open the Windows Media Player, which has a simple drag-and-drop window to order the tracks as you would like them. If you are creating an audio CD, you would have chosen "Burn an audio CD" in the original AutoPlay prompt. If you chose the one-time Mastered format (AKA "With a CD/DVD player"), you'll have to click the "Burn to disc" button in the toolbar and follow the steps in the Wizard from there. ![]() If you formatted the disc using the Live File System ("Like a USB Drive"), then all you have to do is close out by clicking on Close session on the toolbar. Then click "Next."Īll you have to do then is double-click the file on your desktop and drag and drop the files you wish to burn into the empty CD. You can find more information on which format to choose here (Opens in a new window). Click which format you want for the disc: either the more-versatile and re-workable Live File System (AKA "Like a USB Drive") or the one-time Master system (AKA "With a CD/DVD player"). In the subsequent "Burn a Disc" dialog box, type a name for the disc in the "Disc title" field. If you want to fill the disc with files (as opposed to making an audio CD, which we'll get to later), click "Burn files to disc using Windows Explorer." Just slip the disc into the CD tray, which will prompt an AutoPlay dialog box. There are plenty of third-party burner software packages out there, but let's start with what's probably already on your computer.įirst, let's talk to the Windows folks (Opens in a new window). You can burn an audio CD or stuff it with data. So, first thing is make sure that your computer has a burn-ready drive or you have access to an external CD burner. But for some reason, you really, really still want to use a CD. There are plenty of good external hard drives out there, and even some beefy thumb drives. But, I suppose, if you really want to make sure your data is accessible and/or not being snooped on up there in virtual Cloudcuckooland, you need a hard local backup. ![]() In today's mobile, always-connected world, there are plenty of quality free online cloud storage options such as Dropbox or Google Drive, not to mention the media storage options from Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft. But you're here, so you must really want to do this thing, so let's get into it. Why are you still burning stuff onto CDs? Ya weirdo. How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.How to Record the Screen on Your Windows PC or Mac.How to Convert YouTube Videos to MP3 Files.How to Save Money on Your Cell Phone Bill.How to Free Up Space on Your iPhone or iPad.How to Block Robotexts and Spam Messages.
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