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An audio CD is the kind you buy in the store. Some store-bought albums have extra content, but you buy it because it plays the music you want to hear through your CD player of choice--in your car, in your boombox, etc. An audio CD conforms to certain specifications so that CD players from as long ago as the 1980s will be able to play them.

An MP3 CD is a CD burned as data. Unless you have a CD player that specifically boasts about its ability to play MP3 CDs, an MP3 CD will not play in your car, in your boombox, etc.

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16y ago
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7y ago

The difference is in the amount and type of compression, which affects the size of the files and sound quality. A store-bought CD contains music in WAV format. Music that is in MP3 format is more compressed (smaller files), and so takes up less space. A CD can normally fit a maximum of 16-20 songs in the normal WAV format (which will play in a normal CD player), whereas if the songs are in MP3 format you could fit hundreds of songs, but you would only be able to listen to the CD if the CD player is designed to play MP3s. The sound quality of MP3s is technically inferior, but the difference is indistinguishable to the average untrained ears. MP3's are common on the internet because the files are smaller, and therefore they can be downloaded and traded much more quickly. It is fairly easy to convert WAV files to MP3 format, or MP3 files to WAV format, using any number of programs, many of which are free. So many people will convert their CD's to MP3 format for use on their computer, or so they can be loaded onto a portable MP3 player etc. And if you have a CD burner, you can download MP3's from the internet, convert them to WAV, then put them on a CD which will play in your normal CD player.

CD:

CD-Text is an extension of the Red Book Compact Disc specifications standard for audio CDs. It allows for storage of additional information (e.g. album name, song name, and artist) on a standards-compliant audio CD. The information is stored either in the lead-in area of the CD, where there is roughly five kilobytes of space available, or in the Subchannels R to W on the disc, which can store about 31 megabytes. The latter areas are not used by strict Red Book CDs. The text is stored in a format usable by the Interactive Text Transmission System (ITTS). ITTS is also used by Digital Audio Broadcasting or the MiniDisc. The specification was released in September 1996 and backed by Sony. Support for CD-Text is common, but not universal. Utilities exist to automatically rip CD-Text data, and insert it into CDDB or freedb.

MP3:

MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, more commonly referred to as MP3, is a digital audio encoding format using a form of lossy data compression. It is a common audio format for consumer audio storage, as well as a de facto standard of digital audio compression for the transfer and playback of music on digital audio players. MP3 is an audio-specific format that was designed by the Moving Picture Experts Group. The group was formed by several teams of engineers at Fraunhofer IIS in Erlangen, Germany, AT&T-Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ, USA, Thomson-Brandt, and CCETT as well as others. It was approved as an ISO/IEC standard in 1991.

The use in MP3 of a lossy compression algorithm is designed to greatly reduce the amount of data required to represent the audio recording and still sound like a faithful reproduction of the original uncompressed audio for most listeners, but is not considered high fidelity audio by audiophiles. An MP3 file that is created using the mid-range bit rate setting of 128 kbit/s will result in a file that is typically about 1/10th the size of the CD file created from the original audio source. An MP3 file can also be constructed at higher or lower bit rates, with higher or lower resulting quality. The compression works by reducing accuracy of certain parts of sound that are deemed beyond the auditory resolution ability of most people. This method is commonly referred to as perceptual coding. It internally provides a representation of sound within a short term time/frequency analysis window, by using psychoacoustic models to discard or reduce precision of components less audible to human hearing, and recording the remaining information in an efficient manner. This is relatively similar to the principles used by JPEG, an image compression format.

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18y ago

A CD (compact disk) is a storage medium, like a floppy disk, which holds information and an MP3 is a file format... special kind of audio file. The standard music CD from the store, has it's music in a audio format known as AIFF. Both audio formats, AIFF and MP3 can be burned onto a CD, but not all CD players will play MP3 formated CDs. A CD will hold more MP3s than it will AIFF songs.

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16y ago

Audio CD's have digital encryption encoding that is recognised by some audio CD recording equipment. The equipment will only recognise audio CD's and allow recordings to take place. Generally they are more expensive. That way money is paid to the artists for performing rights

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12y ago

An mp3 player is easier on the machine memory wise.

Mp3 files are much more compact, that is how ipods can hold thousands of songs, and CD's can only hold 15-20.

Mp3 players are now replacing CD players, which will soon be obselete, like walkmans.

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15y ago

The difference is in the amount and type of compression, which affects the size of the files and sound quality. A store-bought CD contains music in WAV format. Music that is in MP3 format is more compressed (smaller files), and so takes up less space. A CD can normally fit a maximum of 16-20 songs in the normal WAV format (which will play in a normal CD player), whereas if the songs are in MP3 format you could fit hundreds of songs, but you would only be able to listen to the CD if the CD player is designed to play MP3s. The sound quality of MP3s is technically inferior, but the difference is indistinquishable to the average untrained ears. MP3's are common on the internet because the files are smaller, and therefore they can be downloaded and traded much more quickly. It is fairly easy to convert WAV files to MP3 format, or MP3 files to WAV format, using any number of programs, many of which are free. So many people will convert their CD's to MP3 format for use on their computer, or so they can be loaded onto a portable MP3 player etc. And if you have a CD burner, you can download MP3's from the internet, convert them to WAV, then put them on a CD which will play in your normal CD player.

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15y ago

A CD is used for storage and a MP3 is a audio format.

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11y ago

Audio CDs are cdr disks that have audio tracks transferred onto them.

If you use cdrw disks they may not work on your audio equipment

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Q: What is the difference between audio and recordable cd's?
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Related questions

What year did CD burners come out?

i dont really know but i espect 200 me dont know Raaaahhhh!!!!!


Does vbr work on audio cds?

Regular audio CDs are uncompressed, therefore no. MP3 CDs generally support vbr however.


What is the limitation of a compact disc-recordable drive?

Obviously, you cannot play DVDs. You can only read & write up to the specified speeds, and CDs can only hold up to 700MB (megabytes) which is 80 minutes of audio.


What is the limitation of a compact disc recordable drive?

Obviously, you cannot play DVDs. You can only read & write up to the specified speeds, and CDs can only hold up to 700MB (megabytes) which is 80 minutes of audio.


What is the difference between CDs and VHS?

CD is a red-book digital audio storage standard and VHS is an analog video storage standard. CDs record data digitaly on a disk read with a lazer, whereas VHS tapes are analog and are read with an electromagnetic pickup.


Can DVD play audio cds?

Most can


What is the differences between the audio and data Cd's?

Audio CDs can be played by CD players and radios. The music CDs of your favorite artists that you buy are audio CDs, and they have nothing on them except audio signal. Data CD is a CD that can contain different types of data such as photos, videos, mp3 files, text files, etc. Data CDs are normally usable only on computers. However, there are radios and DVD-players that can scan through a data CD and find files that can be played on that particular player (for example, mp3 files).


Will an audio CD from the UK play in the US?

Yes it will, there is no region restrictions on audio CDs


Can Digital Audio CDs be Played in a Computer?

Yes.


Is audio DVD playable by playstation 2?

yes it can play audio and video DVDs and CDs


What is all the difference between a CD and DVD?

CDs are for music while DVDs are for movies


Can music recorded on a CD-r play in another CD player?

If the CD-R is recorded as a Standard Audio CD (AKA Compact Disc Audio Redbook standard) then yes. The CD player will treat the CD-R as a Audio CD and play it fine. If the CD-R is recorded with .MP3 files then it may not because the disc format does not conform to the redbook standard. A few DVD players can play .MP3 files, but most Audio CD players cannot. Some early CD players do not have a fine enough laser, or processing, to recognise the sensitive coating of a Recordable CD. Mass produced CDs have a profile stamped onto a metal layer inside the clear coating of a disc, which is easier to read by a simple laser. Recordable CDs change the crystaline structure of the sensitive layer, which is harder to resolve with a simple laser.