Toast software (which may or may not work on a G3) offers the option of
burning data in a mixed format mode that can be read by either Macs or PCs.
It seems to work fine in this respect.
Lang,
Following on from your comment:
>
> I think you're confusing Audio Compact Disc with CD-R. They are two
> different things. If you burn an Audio Compact Disc, then all soundfiles
> must be 16-bit and 44.1 kHz. But we're talking about data CDs or data DVD=
s,
> which can be used to back up any computer file.
>
I think I know that if I burn an audio CD of wildlife sounds, any CD player
can play it. (Except perhaps if I fill it with 80 minutes of sound there
are players that don't handle that much.)
However if with my Mac G3 I burn a data CD of the same sound, a PC won't be
able to read it? And possibly even Macs with an earlier operating system
won't either. Am I right?
This would make data CDs a bit risky for archiving long term. When I have
to replace my G3, will I still be able to read its' data CDs? A chore if I
have to transfer them all from the G3 before disposing of it; disaster, if
I'm replacing it because it died.
Syd
"Microphones are not ears,
Loudspeakers are not birds,
A listening room is not nature."
Klas Strandberg
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