


Oh, and of course it assumes that somebody else also transferred the same vinyl to CD and submitted the disk and track info to the database. I can only guess that they figured it out from the track count and track length signature. Start by recording audio directly in the software or adding previously recorded audio. Sometimes freedb or CDDB will recognize these disks and give me the artist, album and track names. WavePad Audio Editor Free NCH Software Multimedia design > Music production WavePad Audio Editor is the perfect audio and music editing program to quickly edit audio and music files. I know I have transferred a lot of Vinyls to CD. Maybe RealPlayer invents one and dubs it in for you when you burn a CD. (Some systems try to recognize a disk by the number of tracks and the exact length of each track.) There's nothing on a CD but a registration number and the music, and I'm not sure, but I don't think the registration number exists on a burned CD because it's a number assigned by the music industry for an officially produced CD. If RealPlayer remembers the track names after you burn a CD, it's because it filed the info away when you burned it and the next time you put the burned disk in, it had some way to recognize it and looked it up in it's own internal system. ALL that info comes from freedb based on some magic number that was read from the CD. When you put a CD into your computer and WavePad says it is connecting with freedb and then shows you the artist, album, track names. wav files don't have any space allocated to put information.
