TizMe Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 I would like to be able to copy the music from 4 or 5 CDs onto one DVD. I want the end product to be of the same quality as the original CD.Anyone know if this is possible? What software do I need? I have Nero 6 but it doesn't seem to have this feature?Any ideas appreciated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boris Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 Try this ?http://www.audio-dvd-creator.com/There's a trial version that you can try for 30 days for freeBut note !Trial version limit: Only the first 5 titles, and the first 5 songs in each title will be created. After you purchase Audio DVD Creator, this limitation will be removed automatically.Features: Put several (about 5-6) Audio CDs on one DVD with perfect audio quality. Put thousands of audio files on one DVD with top audio quality.Create DVD menu automatically.Create up to 99 DVD titles.Burn the Audio DVD to DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW directly.Create the Audio DVD to hard disk files.Output format is DVD-Video compliant, so that it can be played by any DVD player.Rip Audio CD to WAV files, and import them to Audio DVD directly.Import 96kHz/24bits WAV files, and keep the superb quality.Import Windows Media Format(.wma, .wmv, .asf), Real Media(.rm), OGG, FLAC, AC3 and AVI files via DirectShow Filters.Preview shows an overview of your Audio DVD.Save/Load your project, and edit it anytime.Blazing fast speed, only need about 30 minutes to create a PCM format Audio DVD. For AC3 format, it may need several hours.Easy to use: the wizard will guide you step by step - very suitable for beginners!Create Audio CD.Import AC3 5.1ch or AC3 2ch files, and export them to Audio DVD without quality loss. Use Matrix Mixer to convert 2ch audio input to AC3 5.1ch output. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
-pops- Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 Be aware that DVDs are much more delicate than CDs. They are less able to compensate for minor scratches and other adverse surface conditions (fingermarks, yesterday's sandwich fillings and crumbs, etc.) than CDs and almost certainly won't put up with the rough handling that many CDs are put through such as being kept without covers in pockets and bags.As a rider to that, also bear in mind that if you've committed several CDs to one DVD, if the DVD fails you have lost a lot more than one CD's worth of music (or whatever you have on the disk.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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