45
12. Choose a saving location of the Music folder that you created earlier and name the
tracks for identification purposes (The name will not show up in an audio CD player).
The files will be in an AIFF format (Audio Interchange File Format).
13. When finished with this CD, eject it and insert another audio CD until you have all the
songs that you want or 650 Mbytes of music.
14. Close Toast Audio Extractor 1.0 and open Toast.
15. Change the format to Audio CD.
16. Press the Audio button on the right and drag in the AIFF files, that you created, into the
Audio Tracks window. Keep an eye on the total. Make sure you don't go over the
capacity of your blank CD.
17. When all the tracks have been added or you have reached the capacity of your CD
select Done.
18. Select Write CD, then Write Disc. Most audio CD players do not understand multi-
session CD's. When writing audio always use Write Disc.
19. After creating your Audio CD you can delete the audio tracks from your Music folder.
7.4.4. Making Incremental Audio CD's
1. Most audio CD players do not understand multi-session CD's, therefore making an
incremental Audio CD is the same as a Compilation CD.
2. Use Toast Audio Extractor to extract the songs that you want on the CD into your
Music folder.
3. When you have extracted a CD's worth of songs (650 Mbytes/74 minutes) go to Toast
and make your Audio CD.
7.4.5. Making a CD from a Cassette or LP
1. Attach the Cassette or LP player to the Macintosh.
2. Use Launch Simple Sound (Apple Menu OS 8 or later)
3. Select the Sound menu and select CD Quality
4. From the File menu select New.
5. This will give you a Record screen.
6. Record the Tracks that you want and save them to your hard drive.
7. Simple Sound will save the file as a System Sound File.
8. You will need to download a program like SoundApp PPC to convert the file from a
System Sound to an AIFF file. SoundApp PPC can be found at www.zdnet.com
9. Then follow the directions for a Compilation Audio CD.
7.4.6. No CD On Desktop
As with all SCSI devices the device must be turned on prior to the computer, before you
can use the device. If the Yamaha drive is not turned on first, you will not be able to read
CD's. If the drive was turned on after the computer, then you will not see a CD icon on
screen. Blank discs will not show up on the desktop regardless of when the Yamaha drive
was turned on.