Nothing really all that wrong about that.  My car's radio plays music from a
data CD burned full of MP3 files, so ripping a "protected" CD is a rather
valid thing to desire IMHO - cramming 10 CDs worth of music onto a single
disc reduces clutter.
 
 
Phillip Partipilo
Parametric Solutions Inc.
Jupiter, Florida
(561) 747-6107
 
 
 

  _____  

From: Klint Price - ArizonaITPro [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2008 1:23 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: just plain old copying CDs


Any chance you are stumbling on anti-piracy measures built into many CD's
these days.

Klint

Silvio L. Nisgoski wrote: 

Nero does the job well.  Is that anything strange about the original cd that
some program could not interpret correctly ?
 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Holstrom, Don <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
To: NT System Admin Issues <mailto:[email protected]>  
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2008 1:51 PM
Subject: just plain old copying CDs


I just copied a CD and it won't work as it should. I used to use CloneCD, I
may even have copy somewhere. I think they closed shop at the behest of some
organization or another. I also have the latest Roxio and Nero laying around
somewhere. I just want a perfectly copied CD, byte for byte, down & dirty,
easy, so it cannot be recognized as something other than the original. I
have all sorts of machines with both XP & Vista & OSX so that is not a
problem. Is there a consensus on CD duplication out there?


 

 


 



 



 


 


  _____  

If this email is spam, report it here:
http://www.OnlyMyEmail.com/ReportSpam
<http://www.onlymyemail.com/view/?action=reportSpam&Id=ODEzNjQ6NzQ5MjczMTcxO
nBqcEBwc25ldC5jb20%3D>  

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

Reply via email to