no worries mate

rhyl is pretty much a dead town. the old fayre has gone and the place is full of the usual misplaced people. I left west cheshire in 06 after graduating with honours in classical and professional music.

here I am now launching the first fully blind run studio in Wales and am struggling as these funny people wont help with finance or even see that I'm worth the work. I've studio gear for sale so if there's anyone in the UK who wants some details on what I'm selling then contact me

lew



On 28 Mar 2008, at 17:46, KEITH BROWN wrote:

OK thanks Lew.
that's useful to know. how's Rhyl? do you still have much to do with west cheshire? oops better not clog up the list.

Keith  On 28 Mar 2008, at 17:38, Lewis Brock wrote:

toast 9 isn't exactly voiceover friendly and could be greatly improved. there's a lot of labeling to do and really I do wish roxio would fix this. I will be relying on roxio all the time as soon as the studio is officially launched

so may contact them for an update fix

lew


On 28 Mar 2008, at 17:31, KEITH BROWN wrote:

Scott.
how well does toast work with voiceover? thanks for the useful info.


Keith
On 28 Mar 2008, at 13:36, Scott Bresnahan wrote:

Hi,

If you want an exact copy of that CD, you should use the utility application Disk Utility. The procedure goes like this:
1.  Insert original CD.
2.  Run Disk Utility.
3.  Select the CD volume from the outline view.
4. From the File Menu, Select New submenu New Disk Image from Selected volume.
5.  Save the disk image somewhere on your hard disk.
6.  Eject the original CD.
7.  Select from the Images menu the menu item Burn...
8. From the Dialog, find the image file you just saved and follow the final instructions.


Although Tim's steps are ok too, the disk utility technique will preserve the exact file structure and not add any finder store files or any other hidden files to the copy.

But, if you own Toast, you can just contextually click on the CD and select "Toast It!"

--Scott




Hi Keith,

You said: maybe i should have said that i wish to copy it to another CD. sorry.

TK: Not much different. Simply put your blank CD into the drive on your MacBook, a dialog should appear asking you what you'd like to do with the blank CD, choose "open the Finder" if it isn't already chosen. Once in the Finder, an item named "Untitled CD" will appear on your Desktop, you can rename it if you'd like using regular renaming conventions. After that, simply follow the instructions outlined in my previous post below to copy the selected items from the original CD to the blank one that should be on your Desktop.

Later...


Previous post:

You asked: can anyone tell me how to copy a data CD using my Macbook?


TK: You can either select the icon representing the Data CD on your Desktop, then press cmd-c to copy it to the clipboard, then navigate to where you wish to put it and press cmd-v to paste it there, or, open the Data CD, press cmd-a to select all its items, then cmd-c to copy andthen navigate to the place you wish to put it and then press cmd-v to paste.

HTH.

Later...

Tim Kilburn

& Carter the Canine
Fort McMurray, AB Canada




Tim Kilburn
& Carter the Canine
Fort McMurray, AB Canada

--
--Scott




Lewis Brock
Totally Blind musician and composer of 21st century music

PHONE: +44 07857 352828
E-MAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SKYPE: lewisjbrock





Lewis Brock
Totally Blind musician and composer of 21st century music

PHONE: +44 07857 352828
E-MAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SKYPE: lewisjbrock


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