One thing I can tell you is that, last week-end I created 2 CD's for
my mother with ITunes and it was a breeze. I created the playlists I
wanted, then pressed "burn disk" and boom! there was my audio discs
creation efforts.
I experimented something else though, that did not give me that kind
of satisfaction. I created an ISO image on a Windows machine, copied
it to my Mac and, using ITunes, tried to burn it. Everything went
well. ITunes even told me that the CD was going to be readable by
both Windows and Mac computers. The only thing is that, the Mac-
created CD did not boot on the Windows machine, even though it was
supposed to.
I wouldn't consider my results to be conclusive however. I have yet
to try this with another CD and see if the problem is consistent...
Other more knowledgeable folks on this list will probably pitch in and
deliver me from my Mac ignorance.
Cheers from Varennes, Qc, Canada
JC
Skype: Canadianfrog
On 13-May-08, at 10:07 PM, vashaun jones wrote:
To move to the top and bottom of something like a message table try
using control, option shift, function key left arrow for top and
right arrow for bottom.
On May 13, 2008, at 7:27 PM, Mike Arrigo wrote:
Hi all. Thanks for the help with skype, guess I will get a USB
microphone for my mac, or do my skyping from my PC. I have a few
other questions if I may ask. I've had my Mac now for about a week
and a half, and want to try some more advanced things. First, has
anyone tried the CD burning program Toast by Roxio? If so, how does
voice over work with it? I know their windows program, easy media
creator is useable. Also, how is the accessibility of itunes when
it comes to creating audio disks? What's the best way to copy a CD,
whether audio or data, does itunes do that also, or should I use
disk utility or the finder? Finally, are there mac commands to
navigate by word in text? And, is there a command similar to the
home or control home command in windows that will move to the top
of a list? So far, I have not found a way to move to the top of the
message list, or a list in the finder.