E
N
G
L
I
S
H
26
E
N
G
L
I
S
H
25
Notes on MP3
(continued)
CX-DVP292N
CX-DVP292N
28
29
Supported file system
Displayable folder names and file names
ISO 9660 Level 1
ISO 9660 Level 2
Joliet*
Romeo
Apple Extension to ISO 9660
Name file and folders in accordance with the standard of each file
system. Refer to the instructions of writing software for details.
≥
This player can display file names of up to 60 ASCII character set.
*Up to 30 letters can be displayed in the Joliet systems. According
to the standard, “á”, “ç”, etc. can be used.
≥
Characters that the player cannot display are shown as an asterisk.
Caution:
≥
Never assign the “.mp3” file name extension to a file that is not in the MP3 format. This may not only
produce noise from the speakers and speaker damage, but can damage your hearing.
Note:
≥
MP3 encode software and writing software are not supplied to this model.
❐
Maximum Number of Files/Folders
≥
Maximum number of trees: 8
≥
Maximum number of files/folders: 254 (files
_
folders. Root folder is not included.)
Note:
≥
If the total of trees and folders exceeds 254, successful playback may not be performed.
❐
Supported File Systems and File Names
ISO 9660
The most common international standard for the
logical format for files and directories.
APPLE HFS
The file system used by the Macintosh operating
system to organize data. (Not supported.)
Multi-session
A method of adding data incrementally to a CD-R or
CD-RW in more than one recording session.
Disc-at-Once
A method of writing data in a media by just one
operation and no more writing after that.
ID3 Tag
A function that allows character information (title,
artist, album title, date, etc) to be written onto the
disc. (ID3 Tag Ver. 2 and up are not supported.)
Packet writing
A method of writing data on a CD media in small
increments. (Not supported.)
ASCII character set
ASCII character set consisting of A to Z, a to z,
digits 0 to 9, and the following symbols: (space) ! "
# $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / : ; < = > ? @ [ \ ] ^ _ ` { | } ~
❐
Copyright
It is prohibited by copyright laws to copy, distribute and deliver copyrighted materials such as music without
the approval of copyright holder except enjoying yourself personally.
❐
Folder Selection Order/MP3 file playback order (Example)
4
5
6
8
3
7
9
1
2
[
1
[
2
[
3
[
4
[
5
[
6
[
7
1
9
[
1
[
7
Tree 1
Root folder (root directry)
Tree 2
Tree 3
Tree 4
Tree 5
Folder selection
In the order
File selection
In the order
Note:
≥
This unit counts the number of the folders irrespective of the presence or absence of MP3 file. (Example:
there is no MP3 file in a root folder as shown in the drawing, but a folder number “001” is given. In fact,
there is no MP3 file to reproduce. Therefore, the next folder is automatically selected.)
≥
The writing software sometimes changes the order of folders and files on a disc, so the order may differ
from what you specified. For details, refer to the user manual of your writing software.
≥
If you record too many folders or files other than MP3 onto a disc, it may take some time before playback
starts.
≥
Playback order varies with players even if the same disc is loaded.
≥
If a disc contains both CD-DA and MP3 data, only CD-DA data will be played back.
≥
If the ignition switch of your car is turned to OFF during playback, there may be a time lag between the file
playing time on the display and the actual playing time. In addition, playback may start from the beginning of
the music when using VBR (Variable Bit Rate) of a MP3 file in the same situation.
Glossary