![]() ![]() Tried various burns, all DAO (help files say this is the only way to burn with track names). ![]() A google search revealed "this was not supported". I cant see anyway to make the "artist" field appear in the main window. ![]() Simple, and on my old PC quick and fast with "Nero"Īfter several hours with Toast I have given up. Burn some some songs (WAV files), print a CD cover insert with the tracks. It's something which should have been corrected before the audio was ever put on sale, but it's handy to know how to fix it! Hope that helps.I recently bought a Mac and spent what I consider a further fair sum on Toast because it was supposed to be th best CD burning programme. If they are to your satisfaction, you can then delete your original uncorrected files. You can then convert them back to whatever format you like. Import your new corrected aiff files to iTunes. When it's done it'll give you a little report of what it's done.ĥ. xACT will crunch away to itself for a while and put the corrected files in your selected folder. Select where you want the corrected files to go (maybe create a new folder). Select output format as aiff and hit the 'Fix' button (I wouldn't check the 'delete original files after fix' box just in case). Now it's probably easiest to create a folder on your desktop and drag the AIFF files from iTunes into it.Ĥ. In iTunes, convert the files to AIFF if they're not in that format already (iTunes > Preferences > Import settings > AIFF encoder, then select the tracks and do Advanced > Create AIFF version).ģ. (you can see that 100,000s of people have been using this happily - the creator is well respected in the taping community - I've certainly had no problems with it.)Ģ. Happily, the solution is not difficult (looks a bit involved, but give it a try - only takes a few minutes, and definitely worth it in my opinion!): *_The Solution_* (assuming the problem IS what I've described above). Audio that's been produced properly will have the tracks set to the right lengths to avoid this. If the length of the audio file is such that the end of the track doesn't coincide with the boundary between sectors, the CD writing software pads the rest of that final sector with zero-bytes, giving that short silence you're hearing - a sector boundary error, or SBE. Audio data is burned onto CDs in sectors of a certain exact size (some fraction of a second which I can't remember offhand. I've come across this problem (and a potential solution) while producing the audio tracks for my own CDs, and also in the (legal) live show trading community. Is it happening with all of your albums? Or just a specific one or a few? And we're talking about a tiny little gap or click rather than, say, a whole second gap? The problem seems to be isolated to itunes 9 and albums purchased through the itunes 9 store. One more thing, any albums purchased with itunes 9 still have a gap when burned on to CD from my other computer which still has itunes 8 installed. What's curious as well is that albums that were purchased prior to itunes 9 that I had successfully burned to CD with no gaps, now have gaps when I attempt to re-burn them with itunes 9. I've never had issues with these types of albums prior to upgrading to itunes 9. I do have "none" selected in my burn settings and I've even tried burning the CD with another application such as Toast, but the slight gap is still there. Playback in itunes or my iphone is not affected. This particular album features songs that seamlessly transition from one to another with no silence in between. The problem is that when burning these albums to CD, there is a ever so small gap in between songs. I've purchased a couple of albums since upgrading to itunes 9. ![]()
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