Question Posted Thursday September 20 2007, 6:14 pm
O.K. So I have Windows Vista 2007
I downloaded Limewire onto my computer
I downloaded the songs from Limewire onto my computer
I saved them onto Windows Media Player, which it does have stored on because it actually plays the songs on there.
I clicked burn on Windows Media.
It said it burned it. I TEST it to see if it did so, and it didn't.
I made my own list on another program that I have to drag the songs, and then I clicked burn there. It supposedly burned and popped out, so I tested it and I heard nothing.
I really need to know step by step how to burn downloaded music (preferably off of limewire) onto Windows Vista 2007 b/c nothing is working and it's driving me crazy. I've spent the last two days doing this. I really do need help. Thanx.
[ Answer this question ] Want to answer more questions in the Technology category? Maybe give some free advice about: Computers? theymos answered Saturday September 22 2007, 9:32 pm: -Download and extract infrarecorder: [Link](Mouse over link to see full location)
direct download link: [Link](Mouse over link to see full location)
-Download an extract this and put the irlame.irc file into the "codecs" folder inside of the place you extracted infrarecorder to: [Link](Mouse over link to see full location)
-Put the disk in
-Open infrarecorder
-Go to file>new project>audio CD
-Use the built-in explorer to add all of your music files, or as many as will fit on the disk(look at the bottom bar). I believe limewire stores your downloads in C:documents and settingsyour user namedownloads, but I could be wrong. You can also drag the files from limewire into infrarecorder.
-In infrarecorder, go to actions>burn compilation>to compact disk.
-In the next window, make sure your CD burner is selected in the first box and change the second box to 6x.
-Click OK and wait while it burns.
-Done.
If it doesn't work:
-You're using something other than a CD-R disk
-You don't have a CD burner
-Your CD burner is broken
-The audio files are broken, DRM'd, or encoded in a weird format [ theymos's advice column | Ask theymos A Question ]
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.