Many apologies, DJ, I thought you meant something else entirely.
But I think you spooked me a bit when you said "Is there any other software available besides soundforge and t-rex", because (a) I never heard of T-Rex and here I figured I'm maybe missing half the programs in the world
and (b) there are really probably more than a dozen good audio editing programs out there. And you'll probably need at least one of them (I personally like Sound Forge XP) to do serious WAV file editing, but...
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>None of them have anything to do with Red Book Standards (other than helping you make stereo 44.1 KHz WAV files, which are necessary for Red Book standard CDs)!<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
What really makes your CDs "Red Book" or not is the CD burning software that comes with your CD-R. If you don't get software when you buy your CD-R, you got screwed, that's all. And the basic meaning of "Red Book" means "you can play it on a regular audio CD player", although it's a bit more involved than that...in fact, the details would fill a...big...red...book!
To make an increasingly long story short, if you get something like Adaptec Easy CD Creator, you'll have your Red Book CDs. You don't need anything fancy or expensive beyond that for making audio CD-Rs.
Any more questions, ask, but be sure to check out
https://homerecording.com/burn_cds.html and all the important links thereon.
[This message has been edited by Dragon (edited 06-23-1999).]