Don't know who else has figured this out, but I just figured it out so I thought I'd share it with the community. The following text was also posted in my blog.
Timecode CD is only 12 mins. long, unfortunatly a few songs are longer than that. Did you know there's a very simple sollution? All you have to do is burn a few tracks of the timecode on the same CD (I used Nero) and set your cd deck to continious play (usualy the default setting). Simple as that, now if your timecode runs out before the song ends it will go to the next track of timecode seemlesly, effectivly offering you as much timecode length as you can fit on a CD, I only used 3 tracks per cd but that's all up to you. Just make sure your CD burning software doesn't add any silence between tracks and you should be good to go;^]
Timecode CD is only 12 mins. long, unfortunatly a few songs are longer than that. Did you know there's a very simple sollution? All you have to do is burn a few tracks of the timecode on the same CD (I used Nero) and set your cd deck to continious play (usualy the default setting). Simple as that, now if your timecode runs out before the song ends it will go to the next track of timecode seemlesly, effectivly offering you as much timecode length as you can fit on a CD, I only used 3 tracks per cd but that's all up to you. Just make sure your CD burning software doesn't add any silence between tracks and you should be good to go;^]
geposted Sun 27 Apr 08 @ 10:01 am