I limit my purchases to 2 types of blank CD.  The CDR a disks which are
more expensive but will take backup to music tracks or direct record
music that can then be played on a standard boom box and the CDR blanks
which will only accept daisy mp3 files but are less expensive.  My
advice is this.

1. find a friend who watches the newspaper for sale prices.  You can
often find sale prices that include rebates which bring the actual cost
of each blank CD  to less than 10 cents and sometimes actually make them
free

2. never purchase CDR RW blanks unless you have an extraordinary
application.  The ability to erase is an over sold feature.  When you
pay 10 cents apiece for a blank you can aford to throw away your
mistakes.  Reviews in PC magazines report over and over that CDRW
technology is less compatible from machine to machine.  They are less
robust and  the overall lifetime is much less than the basic CDR
technology.

Frank Cuta

-----Original Message-----
From: Pennell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 7:27 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: cost of CD




I can purchase cd's for anywhere from nine dollars for 30 cd's to twenty
dollars for 100 cd's.   I would just love to see them discounted nicely.
Thanks.

PENNY GOLDEN
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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