Thanks for the info;
I did notice that Toast has a checkbox on the mail page that says add cd-text but I don't think that
has anything to do with it. I did try to edit this in iTunes updating the cdinfo file but no go.
I edited every file I could think of with the toast application closed. I even dragged the audio file to the
desktop the back to Toast. I even closed iTunes shutdown the network and 2 more burned CD's later
the same thing so no matter what I did the finished product was the same. I even went off line
and started the whole process over and still no go.
I guess the challenge of how to overcome what should be a simple process got my goat.
My wife suggested I burn the file in iTunes....You guess it no more problems and it burned faster.
But I am still going to read over your answer and see if I can get a handle on this.
I hate losing........
Thanks very much for your response
QUOTE (tsantee @ Apr 12 2009, 11:39 AM)

If you burned it as an audio CD there are no metatags with that kind of audio file so the Mac doesn't know what the disc contains. The first time an audio CD is inserted in a Mac the OS checks the cdinfo database file in your Library to see if disc/track info has been entered for an audio CD that matches the number of tracks and track lengths of what was inserted. If none is found then the OS checks the online CDDB for a match and downloads it to the cdinfo file if a match is found. That's why you see the bogus name. You should be able to edit this in iTunes to update the cdinfo file. If no match is found on CDDB or you weren't online when inserting the audio CD you'll see generic disc and track names.
Toast writes CD Text info to audio CDs but the Mac doesn't read CD Text. There is a "CD Text to cdinfo" applescript at dougscripts.com that can automate the transfer of the CD Text info to your cdinfo database file within iTunes.