I think I know -
while the disc was being burned and you enjoyed your beer, aliens 
beamed you up to their mother ship for the normal experiments.  It was 
at this time that they chose you for a special important message to be 
delivered to planet earth.  They were very unsure of how to inform you 
of the message until they realized what you were doing at the time of 
the abduction.  Since they are a higher intelligence, they were 
familiar with a Mac and understood how to add a song to your playlist.  
My bet is that song, if played slowly backwards in your cd player, will 
be all the instructions we need for world peace.  You are one lucky 
human!

(sorry... Holiday stress is causing me to lose control at times)
A better guess is when you transfered song 10 into your mac, somehow it 
grabbed 11 also, but it seems like you would be able to see it.
Bill Micou
On Dec 7, 2004, at 1:18 PM, Neal Hammon wrote:

> To other Mac owners who sometimes use iTunes to make CD-R music discs.
>
> Sunday I decided to made a new record of various tunes which were in 
> my library folder. I opened a new playlist, named it, and proceeded to 
> shuffle tunes from my library list to the new playlist. I put on 23 
> tunes which iTunes said would cover 1:16 minutes, well with in the 
> limit of the disc. I pushed the record button, and when prompted to do 
> so, added the CD, and recorded the playlist. While it was recording, I 
> opened a beer.
>
> Not long afterward, I put this new CD-R into a disc player, to see if 
> it turned out OK. Much to my surprise, somehow an extra tune appeared 
> on the finished record. The really strange thing about this record, is 
> that it is not even in my library!
>
> The only connection with this orphan song that mysteriously appeared 
> (the tune was Swinging on a Star by Bing Crosby) is that I had put 
> another tune into my library several hours before from the same 
> commercial CD, this being Bing?s version of Deep in the Heart of 
> Texas. The latter was number 11 on the commercial disc, whereas the 
> former was number 10. I checked my library tune list several times; I 
> have only one Bing Crosby song, and it is Deep in the Heart of Texas.
>
> Monday I decided to make another recording from the same playlist, and 
> volla- it was perfect. It did not include the orphan version of 
> Swinging on a Star.
>
> Normally I would think that I just lost my senses, but I played the 
> first recording three times, and the orphan song is still present. It 
> took the number five spot, between two other tunes on my playlist. I 
> should also mention that the playlist did not include the other Bing 
> Crosby song that is in my library.
>
> No big deal, as I only wasted a cheap CD and five minutes of time, but 
> the mystery has me puzzled, and I would like to know how it happened, 
> Anyone have any ideas?
>
> Neal Hammon
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
>
> | The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will
> | be January 25. The LCS Web page is <http://www.kymac.org>.
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> | List Web page: <http://erdos.math.louisville.edu/macgroup>




| The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will
| be January 25. The LCS Web page is <http://www.kymac.org>.
| List posting address: <mailto:macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu>
| List Web page: <http://erdos.math.louisville.edu/macgroup>


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