On Fri, 2007-11-23 at 10:38 -0500, James Knott wrote:
Gavin Chester wrote:
On Thu, 2007-11-22 at 21:51 -0500, James Knott wrote:
ny CD info I've seen, comes from a CDDB database, which someone uploaded. I don't think there's any means to store that info on the disk. There's no reason why you couldn't create your own description file, so that the CD player can read it.
The file you are talking about is the "ID3" tag. There are several editor app. options for how to create your own in linux either manually or automatically. What I'm not 100% sure about is whether the ID3 editors will work just as well for .wav files as it does for .mp3, etc because I've not put it to the test. But, that info should give you a start to google better than you might have up to now :-) HTH.
The CD player in KDE, (I've forgotten it's name) allows you to create your own list and upload it to a server. While I haven't made my own CD's from .WAV files, I believe that's supported in K3B. So, create a CD, then make a list and check it twice! ;-) James
This seems to be the approach of the Windows player but you have to be connected and I am more interested to use it in just plain player like the ones in the car. -=terry=- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org