| Description:
 
 The days of the simple CD-burning utility are seemingly over, and in the  case of Roxio's Toast 5 Titanium, it's a good thing. Lately we've been seeing CD-burning software that attempts to do everything but clean the kitchen  sink, with varying levels of success. In the case of Toast 5, the proverbial  sink is spotless. Plenty of useful features like CD labeling, audio extraction,  and data storage provide meat-and-potatoes satiation. The ability to remove hiss  and crackle from old LPs, and Toast's new OS X-influenced interface, is like the  cherry on top of the dessert. And, of course, the bread-and-butter feature is  Toast's delicious burning options.
   Roxio has kept the functionality of its drag-and-drop window intact from the  previous version, only now the design is reminiscent of a funky '50s diner  jukebox. The window is resizable, with simple buttons specifying the type of CD  you wish to burn. Click audio, data, copy, or other, and the button turns blue.  Pop a blank CD-R into your drive, drag your files into the window, hit that big  red glowing record button in the corner, and you're cooking. Toast 5 continues  to support all major CD formats (like the previous version), and additional  formats including MP3, Mac/ISO hybrid, and VideoCD (playable on many DVD  players). If that was all there is to this package, we'd be done right here,  satisfied, and ready for a nap.   But, as we've mentioned, Roxio has loaded plenty of goodies onto the Toast 5  CD-ROM, some of them frivolous and fattening, (isn't that what goodies are for?)  some of them extremely useful sides. We particularly like iView Multimedia,  which lets you catalog all your images, building a thumbnail library for easy  organization and retrieval. Also cool is CD Spin Doctor. Although we love our  vinyl here at Amazon.com, we've yet to see a device that will play records in  the car. CD Spin Doctor is a simple application that will digitize and create a  waveform of your old LPs and cassettes, then let you add simple filters to  improve the audio. Remove hiss, clicks, and pops, and then burn the result to  audio CD.   There's plenty more on the table. Magic Mouse Discus is a basic labeling kit for  your CDs. Or you can export included templates to Freehand 9, AppleWorks, or  Quark for more complex graphic design for your labels. New in Toast 5 is the  useful background burning capability, allowing you to work in other applications  while Toast is cooking up your discs. Make sure you have plenty of RAM for this  function. You even get folders filled with excellent digital photographs and  free music from popular groups and musicians.   We could go on listing savory features, yet will contain ourselves and simply  admonish the Macintosh users among you: There's no reason not to buy Toast 5  Titanium. It's a well-balanced, nutritious software program that will slake your  ravenous hunger. --John Bosch
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