I just read your post and the good replies to it. Support for various CD formats (and data, etc) will usually be shown via logos on the CD Player (e.g. it's been 20 years since I've had to care). color-changing dyes, or something like that. Note that sufficiently old CD Players can only play commercially stamped CDs (it has to do with the specific wavelength of laser diode in the player / reflectivity of the silver vs. If the CD Player is NOT capable of reading CD-RW, you may need CD-R. Use a proper burning application like k3b or brasero, in "Audio CD" mode. If the CD Player is NOT capable of reading data CDs, you need to create an Audio CD. It's kind of unclear what you actually did, honestly). If the CD Player is (a) capable of reading CDRW AND (b) capable of reading data CDs you should be alright (assuming the disc was properly "finalized" by whatever steps you actually took. The rest of this post will assume that your process did in fact burn a bitstream onto the CD-RW in the first place. Sounds like you didn't make an "Audio CD", but rather a "Data CD" that happens to have audio files on it (or that you never finalized it or actually wrote anything in the first place).
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