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Posted on Dec 25, 2010
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How to tRANSFER songs from a cd to the mp3 player?

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Anonymous

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  • Master 943 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 25, 2010
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For you to transfer songs from a cd to an mp3 player, you need certain materials and you need some time.
First things first, you need a computer, a cd-rom, a media player like realplayer, windows media player or itunes, a usb cable for your mp3 player to be connected to the computer.
After getting all these materials, you can proceed to ripping the song from the cd by inserting the cd into the cd-rom(cd drive) and open any media player then rip the audio from the cd.
After the ripping is completed, you can now connect your mp3 player to your computer and then locate the place where the music file is stored under your computer hard disk and then copy it from there into the memory of the mp3 player.
This is all you need to do. for further information on this procedures, comment on this solution and i would give you an answer.
hope this helped you?

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1helpful
1answer

I need some instructions on how play it

1. Use Windows Media Player to put songs on your Coby MP3 player. Download songs in MP3, WMA, or OGG format from a legal downloading website. If the file is not one of the previously mentioned files, you must download a converter to convert the file to one of the correct files that can be played on Windows Media Player. Rip a song from a CD by inserting the CD and then click on the option to "Rip" the song to your library. Some Coby MP3 players do not need Windows Media Player to add songs, so be sure to check your user manual to see if there is an even simpler method.
2. Connect your Coby MP3 player to your computer using the USB connector that came with your MP3 player. The player will show up under the "Devices" option on your Window Media Player application.
3. Click on the "Library" option to view all of the songs stored on your Windows Media Player library. You can drag the song to the MP3 player in the "Devices" section, or you can right-click on the song and choose the option to transfer the song. In the pop-up box choose your MP3 from the drop-down menu and then click on the "Transfer" button.
4. Right-click on the MP3 player in Windows Media Player and choose the "Eject" option. Disconnect your MP3 player from your computer and turn it on. The song will now be available on your MP3 player. Press the bottom button to play or pause the song.
5. Add videos and pictures to your Coby MP3 player if it supports those files. The process is similar to transferring audio files. Plug your MP3 player into your computer. Open the photo file on your computer and drag pictures into the player. You can create folders to organize the pictures.
1helpful
1answer

Sansa Sandisk 4GB MP3 player problem transferring songs from cd too mp3

Hello sunbeem96678 ,

Have u copied all the songs to the audio folder ?
tip

Connect MP3 Player To Computer and Transfer MP3 Songs From Computer To MP3...

To successfully transfer songs either MP3 or WMA files to your MP3 player follow these steps.

1) If your device came with a CD insert this into your computer and follow the on-screen instructions.

If the device has no CD most PCs will recognise the device and update the drivers automatically once you have connected it via USB cable.

2) Connect the device to the PC using USB cable. With many players this is the only means of charging the device.

3) On your computer go to 'Start' - 'My Computer' and you should see the device listed as a USB Mass Storage or Removable Disk.

4) Click and highlight the songs you want to transfer to the MP3 player. You can either drag and drop them directly into the USB Mass Storage Folder shown in Step 3 or you can right click the song file and select 'Send To' USB Mass Storage Device.

5) The songs are now on your MP3 player.

6) Disconnect the player from the USB cable. The player will take a moment to update and you can now play the songs on the player.

Note: In order to transfer music files from a CD these must first be converted to MP3 in order for the player to be able to play them. To do this you can use Windows Media Player to 'Rip' the songs onto your computer in MP3 format. From here use the steps above to transfer them onto the player.

If your MP3 player has video capability these files will need to be converted in to a format that the player can handle. To do this, use the software that came with the device on the CD or you may use a free converter like this one if the original software is lost.

Hope this Tip has helped.

Please do reflect this and indicate your rating using the Yes/No buttons below.
tip

Song Formats for Mp3 Players Explained, Part II by Tha Mp3 Doctor WMA files are...

Song Formats for Mp3 Players Explained, Part II
by Tha Mp3 Doctor

WMA files are special. There are two types of WMA file, and the Mp3 or digital Audio Player documentation will not always tell which of these two types the Mp3 player will recognize. Type I is a non-licensed, or non-DRM-protected WMA file. DRM stands for Digital Rights Management, and it is Microsoft’s copyright system for music files. If you have a type of Mp3 player that will only accept non-DRM protected files, the product specs for your player will NOT mention the words "DRM" or "Windows Plays ForSure" on them (unless they are using it in the negative, such as "this player does NOT support DRM encryption"). In MOST cases (there are more and more exceptions), Windows Media Player will convert songs from CD’s that you personally bought from the store into non-DRM encrypted WMA format.

The second type of WMA file is a DRM-encrypted WMA file, and there are several subtypes of these. Every DRM-encrypted file can have "play rights," "burn rights," and "transfer rights." "Play rights" mean you can play the song on your computer, "burn rights" mean you can burn the song to CD, and "transfer rights" mean you can transfer the song to your Mp3 player. Once again, not all WMA files are created equal. If you have a BASIC subscription to a music service such as Napster, you may download songs that have "play rights" – you can play them on your computer without any problem; but they may lack burn rights and transfer rights – so you cannot burn them to CD, or transfer them to your Mp3 player without incident. The solution here is to upgrade your music service to the premium, more expensive subscription that includes burn rights and transfer rights.

Then there are "fixed-term" licenses and "unlimited" licenses on WMA files. A fixed-term license will expire after so many days, months, or years; and will require you to resynchronize your songs to the music service or to your computer in order to continue playing them. This is a key reason behind songs "disappearing." Napster and Rhapsody are two examples of music services with fixed-term licenses. You must resynchronize your Mp3 player to your computer every 30 days, and you must keep you music service subscription active. If you let your subscription lapse, then the songs that were once working will no longer be playable. Once again, the only remedies are to renew your music service subscription (legal), convert those songs into a different format that the Mp3 player will recognize (possibly illegal), or to use DRM-removal software (illegal and unreliable).

One word needs to be said about burning your own personal CD’s and transferring them to the Mp3 player. CD’s naturally put song files into CDA format. Most Mp3 players do not recognize CDA format. So you will have to use Windows Media Player (easiest, IMO) or some other software to convert the CDA files into Mp3, WMA, or some other format that your Mp3 player recognizes, BEFORE you can transfer them to the Mp3 player.

Real Audio files also have an encryption system, and may not work with most Mp3 players – check your product documentation.

Audiobooks are in their own format and bring their own special problems which fall outside the scope of this article.

There are a ton of music services out there. iTunes uses AAC format. Napster, Rhapsody, Bearshare, Spiral Frog, and many others use DRM-protected WMA format nowadays. Limewire and Morpheus generally use Mp3 or non-DRM-encrypted files. Double check the formats that your player will support BEFORE choosing a music service. Conversely, if you already have a music service, choose an mp3 player that’s right for your particular service. Note: most store workers do not have the faintest idea of what I have been discussing in this article, so don’t trust their judgment – educate yourself first.

AS A GENERAL RULE OF THUMB (as always, there are exceptions), all Mp3 players recognize the Mp3 file format. The Mp3 file format is the least problematic of all the file formats. It takes up less space on your Mp3 player than most file formats – so you can load more songs onto your player than if you were using other formats. So, if you download all of your songs into Mp3 format, or tell Windows Media Player to convert your own CD’s into Mp3 format, then you will rarely go wrong.
0helpful
1answer

Adding Songs from CDs onto my MP3 Player

If you're using Windows, then use Windows Media player to rip your music into WMA. If you don't want to do that, use CDdex to rip your music from CD to MP3. The problem probably lies in whatever program your using to rip your music. To your player. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/
0helpful
1answer

How do i get a cd that i have to copy the song to this Wonderful RCA mp3 player

do you mean you have to burn your song from your RCA mp3 player to a cd??? well, thats simple, try to plug your mp3 player to your PC then if you could open directly your mp3 player, you could copy the songs on it then transfer it on a folder. or if you need to use the mp3 player's software to communicate with the mp3 player, you try to look for the function extract/export or whatever function in your software to transfer your mp3 player songs to your pc.

well if your done, lets go to the second step.

you need to have a cd burner in your pc and the software to burn cd (like nero). if you got these things, well we are ready to burn.

1st, run the nero software. then look for the "make an audio cd", then the program will ask for the files (songs) that you will burn, thats the time you will place your transfered songs from your mp3 player. then just click next.. and it will start to burn then finishes... then there you go....
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My Philips 2gb gogear will not let me add any mp3 songs

Make sure you have installed the device manager software form the product CD.

You need to use Windows Media Player Sync function to transfer songs.
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Downloading music

if you have windows media player you can put the CD in a select "Rip" and then the songs will be in the library then you go to "Sync" and then pick the songs you want and then press "Start Sync"
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How do I?

I'm not an expert on these, but I'll give ya a shot. It seems that if you are trying to pull the songs directly from the CD to your MP3 player then the problem is you have to rip the songs to an MP3 format. The audio CD will not convert automatically to play on an MP3 player. First find a way to rip the songs and place them on your computer harddrive in MP3 format and then you should have no problem placing them on your player. Let me know if you need more assistance
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Can't transfer songs onto my mp3 player

Some types of mp3 files won't transfer to Creative Zen players. Try re-encoding the files either again in mp3 or in wma and try importing them again.
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