Gustavo, thanks. I'll go back and reread the man
pages. Reguardless, I'm trying to produce a data CD.
The contents are 48000khz, 16bit files. Otherwise I'd
produce DAO audio CDs with 44100khz 16bit which always
work.
These particular files are being passed to a film shop
where they've requested 48000khz. I'm guessing that
rate is appropriate for DVD. I don't have a clue what
they're actually doing and didn't bother asking.
ron
--- "Gustavo Zamorano S." <gzsuniq(a)cableonda.net>
wrote:
I think you should add option -audio.
Execute: man cdrecord, then serach for EXAMPLES at
the end ( with
/EXAMPLES) then serach for example on how to create
audio cds.
I hope this will help you.
GZS
On Sat, 2003-02-08 at 00:46, R Parker wrote:
Hi,
Maybe someone could hit me with the clue stick.
Please.
I have generated a data disc, comprised of audio
files, using; 'mkisofs -o $FILE.iso $FILE |
cdrecord
-v fs=6m speed=4 dev=0,6,0
/home/tmp/$FILE.iso'.
When these disks are inserted into the CD drives
on
Macintosh computers, they either fail to be
recognized
immediately or they'll be partially read but
ultimately fail.
Could someone please give me a clue as to what I
need
to do to produce a data disk/file system that
Macintosh computers can read. Preferably using
mkisofs
and cdrecord.
Thanks,
ron
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