I'm going to try and find a link to support this, but it is important
for everyone on etree to realize:

There is no EFFECTIVE difference (aside from the regular ones that
affect all discs, like where they are made and with what materials)
between regular CDRs that are marketed for DATA, and the ones marketed
for AUDIO, except that the audio ones are more expensive due to a
general royalty that is payed to some record label organization
(RIAA?)...  So - yes - you can use whatever disc you want wherever you
want to use it - the difference is in labelling (or in the chip inside
the reader) alone...


This is as I understand it.  I might be wrong, and would love to have
someone get back to me on it.

8-Damien
Peace

FYI - When researching this question, I came across this FAQ - have NO
idea if you've seen it anywhere before, or who's it is, but HOLY TOLEDO
it has a lot of answers to questions you'd never think to even ask about
CDRs....

http://www.cdrfaq.org/faq.html



The Lost Bears wrote:
> 
>   I am doing a B&P for someone. They sent me audio
> CDRs like you would use in a stand alone recorder. Can
> I still use these to burn on a computer? I know you
> can't use computer CDRs in a stand alone. I could just
> try it but I figure why mess the discs up if it wont
> work. I appreciate any suggestions. Thanks, Tom
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