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Minidisc Reader For Mac



How to use mini or other nonstandard optical discs on your Mac. Most optical discs are a standard 12cm in diameter, are round, and besides some potential manufacturing incompatibilities with. Jul 23, 2019  To transfer music from a MiniDisc (MD) to a computer, the MD player must have an analog or digital LINE OUT jack and be connected to a computer with an analog or digital LINE IN jack. In addition, audio recording software must be installed on the.

Apple has begun to stop installing CD/DVD drives since the introduction of MacBook Air in January 2008. Later Apple discontinued manufacturing MacBook and iMac with optical drives in 2016 and mid-2011 respectively. With your new Mac devices, you are not able to run CDs or DVDs. For this purpose, you need to rely on external CD/DVD drives. Moreover, you need an external drive to import movies and music to iTunes. If you have got the latest MacBook or iMac (released after 2012 and 2016), you need to buy the best external CD/DVD drives.

Quick access:

#1. Apple USB SuperDrive

Apple claims that its USB SuperDrive has everything you need in an optical drive. With simplicity, this external drive has state-of-the-art technology. You can connect this SuperDrive with your MacBook Pro with Retina display, MacBook Air, iMac, or Mac mini with a single USB Type A cable, which is built into this SuperDrive.

The design of this drive is compact as it is slightly bigger than a CD case. You can carry this SuperDrive anywhere in your travel bag or laptop bag. Use this drive on your desk or tray table. Check out the compatible devices.

USP: Compact design
Check out on Apple

Minidisc Reader For Mac Download

#2. VersionTECH

VersionTECH is one of the leading brands in manufacturing high-quality CD/DVD drives for Mac. The most useful feature on this drive is that there is no eject button. And you are not supposed to use any driver program or extra power supply as it can be powered by the USB port.

VersionTECH has created a stylish design that features a durable metal finish with an elegant silver lid. The ultra-slim drive is convenient to carry anywhere. Among other notable features, this drive boasts are embedded cable, premium wire drawing material, low noise, and high durability.

USP: Ultra-thin design
Check out on Amazon

#3. LG

LG is a renowned brand in the world of electronics. The brand has also manufactured top-notch accessories like power banks, Bluetooth headphones, keyboards, stylus and more. For your Mac, LG brings an ultra-slim DVD external drive. With its 8X DVD-R writing speed, you can quickly transfer data from your DVD or CD to your MacBook or iMac.

During the style evolution, LG’s optical drive has achieved a new status from slimmer to the slimmest. The product occupies little space on your desk and delivers the best performance every time you insert a CD or DVD.

USP: Superior data protection
Check out on Amazon

#4. Cocopa

With its high-speed interface of USB 3.0, Cocopa can quickly transmit your data at the maximum speed of 5GBPS. This makes Cocopa an excellent choice of marketing executives, who have to make presentations in offices. The strong fault tolerance gives a stable performance.

For fashion-forward users, Cocopa has used brushed texture shell that gives you a good touch feeling. With its small size, you can carry this portable DVD drive with your laptop anywhere.

USP: Stable performance
Check out on Amazon

#5. Gipow

Beating USB 2.0 and USB 1.0, Gipow has designed a USB 3.0 external drive for your Mac. Whether it is your movies, videos, or audio contents, you can quickly transfer everything to your Mac. If you don’t want to transfer audio/visual contents, you can watch or listen to the contents directly from the drive.

This CD/DVD drive is compatible with multiple operating systems, apart from macOS. It’s a plug-and-play drive you can install and use without any software or driver.

USP: Fashionable design
Check out on Amazon

#6. Rioddas

Minidisc Reader For Mac Pro

When I opened the package, I wondered there was no cable attached to this drive. Then I realized that the cable is smartly embedded at the bottom of this drive. This intelligent design can impress any user. This is the best portable drive for Mac owners, who have to travel extensively. The drive doesn’t occupy space in your travel bag or laptop bag.

For better stability on any glossy surface, Rioddas has put a non-slip pad on the bottom. This non-slip pad prevents your drive from falling off your table or desk. The multi-functional CD/DVD drive can burn movies and music.

Minidisc Reader For Mac Download

USP: Embedded cable design
Check out on Amazon

#7. ISKE

Unlike other external CD/DVD drives that show eject button, ISKE doesn’t have that eject button. When you want to eject a CD or DVD from the drive, you can perform this action from your Mac.

ISKE’s external drive boasts intelligent design as it offers embedded cable design; users should not underrate this feature as it can protect the cable and makes your drive more portable.

USP: No eject button
Check out on Amazon

#8. Botee

Botee has come up with a unique feature: voltage stabilization system. This system avoids high or low voltage lead. Thus, it can protect your computer from any damage. Bootee offers you free lifetime product warranty, 30-day product replacement or refund.

Universal compatibility of this drive enables it to work with multiple operating systems aside from macOS. This means you can smoothly transfer your data from Windows computer to Mac or vice versa.

Minidisc

USP: Voltage stabilization
Check out on Amazon

#9. ivkey

ivkey presents unique design in its external CD drive that works with USB 3.0 high-speed interface. For faster data transmission speed, use this product and achieve a maximum speed of up to 5GBPS. Along with speed, you get stable performance and strong fault tolerance.

Ivkey has unparalleled intelligent burning technology and brand new chip to correct the errors. You can play your audio/visual contents without any log or distortion.

USP: Intelligent burning technology
Check out on Amazon

#10. VicTsing

VicTsing brings a multi-function external CD/DVD drive with which you can watch DVD movies, burn files, music, videos to another CD or DVD. You can also install software and create backup discs etc.

VicTsing offers robust anti-shock and noise-reduction technology. The drive consumes low power, and it can be powered by the USB port; you are not supposed to use any external adapter. Don’t miss its slim and lightweight design, which provides a stylish appearance.

USP: Error-correction ability
Check out on Amazon

That’s all!

Summing up…

Minidisc Recorders

For smooth, hassle-free, fast, and secure transmission of your data, external CD/DVD drive is the best solution for your Mac. Note that you can buy any CD or DVD with maximum data storage capacity and then transfer your data from one computer to another.

You may also like to refer:

Which external CD/DVD drive would you like to buy for your Mac?

Jignesh Padhiyar is the co-founder of iGeeksBlog.com who has a keen eye for news, rumors and all the unusual stuff that happens around Apple products. During his tight schedule, Jignesh finds some moments of respite to share side-splitting contents on social media.

Really want to transfer files from MiniDisc to Mac and it's really not working...


I've called the support centers of all equipment involved in this situation and no one has an answer for me, nor do older ask.mefi questions provide any answers, so I appeal to you for help.
I want to transfer recorded files from my minidiscs to my computer. I have a Sharp MD-MT90 portable recorder, optical cable, Sound Blaster Digital Music PX, accompanying USB cord, and PowerBook G4.
When I hook up the Sharp MD to Sound Blaster (optical line out)--->Sound Blaster to PowerBook (USB cord), my computer recognizes that there is a USB Audio device present in the 'Sound' section of System Preferences, but neither GarageBand or Audacity recognize that there is anything hooked up to the computer.
In Garageband, I opened a 'real instrument' track, enabled recording and turned on monitoring, then pressed Play on the MD.
Am I just dealing with antiquated equipment? Is it a problem with the settings on my computer or do I need to buy different equipment to get the songs on my minidiscs onto my Mac?
Thanks so much in advance.

posted by fan_of_all_things_small to Computers & Internet (5 answers total)

Are you connecting the MD to your computer via USB, Optical, or the stereo mini-jack? I can only record in real-time via the stereo mini-jack with my setup (I use Audacity on XP with my Sony MZ-R37).
Transom.org may have some useful information for you:
It's worth noting that despite the ambiguous terminology in product descriptions, the USB connections on the small portables, including Sony's 'Net-MD' models, only support moving audio from the computer to the minidisc, and not the other way around, as most sound-recordists would like. This could change, but for now the way to get sound from a small portable minidisc to the computer for editing, is via the analog outputs, in some cases the headphone out. That analog output is connected to an audio-in on your computer, either built-in to your sound card or on an external interface.
It seems counter-intuitive: you've recorded digital audio onto the minidisc, and want to edit digital audio on your computer, you should be able to just move the files over, but it's not that smooth. Even the HHB can't just transfer the files, it plays the audio out in real time. In effect it has a built-in USB audio interface. Even in making an analog transfer, you still have the sonic advantages of recording to a digital medium, with less noise and wider bandwidth than cassettes. And when done carefully, the analog transfer can be done with minimal negative impact on quality.

posted by sambosambo at 4:18 AM on January 20, 2008

 

For testing purposes, can you hook the MD directly to the Mac using a 3.5' stereo cable (from MD out to computer IN)? Yes, it's analogue but it takes some of the complexity out so you can see if the MD actually works ok!
If that works, then you need to troubleshoot why the soundblaster device doesn't work.. Does the MD actually support optical out to feed into the SB optical in?
posted by ranglin at 4:59 AM on January 20, 2008

 

Yeah I think the issue is there is only digital in (originally for recording CDs onto your minidisk-how cool was that in 1998?). No digital out. Which, in case you were wondering, is totally effing stupid. It was an early copy protection measure, and it is totally lame.
You can still make great recordings on them. For some reason minidisc recordings always sound really warm to me. I've made some really great ones without trying very hard. You just have to play them through the headphone jack into an audio in on your computer. I used to have cable that patched a 1/8' jack to a pair of RCA jacks and put that into my soundcard. You might do 1/8' to 1/8'.
posted by sully75 at 5:27 AM on January 20, 2008

 

At a previous job, I used to have to edit mini-disc-recorded audio on my Mac. What I did was connect the Mini-Disc player (a Sony model) directly to the audio-in analog jack. This allowed me to use Audacity to capture the audio.
posted by Thorzdad at 7:08 AM on January 20, 2008

 

Thanks sooooooo much!!
I connected analog to the headphone jack in the MD and got it with Audacity. Quality is fine.
Thanks again!
posted by fan_of_all_things_small at 7:28 AM on January 20, 2008

 

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