And this is not burning pre-recorded songs! These are brand new, freshly created AIF files taken from a self-recorded church service. There ain't no 'album art,' etc. to find on the interwebs. And I have unchecked that option, anyway!
When the burning is complete
AND i hear the burner making ready to let iTunes show the new CD as a item, I can
usually hover the cursor over the correct place and immediately click the eject icon and the CD ejects. However, if I delay even a few seconds, the drive starts spinning up slightly and the eject icon is inoperable along with the menu command and the keyboard eject key. I can simply twiddle my thumbs for a few minutes and things get back to normal. However, that's not generally what I do.
What I normally do is simply Quit iTunes, which does so without any delays, dialogs or problems. The new CD has already appeared on the Desktop and in a Finder Side Bar. I then click the eject icon there and get a dialog asking if I realize that some app is using the CD and do I want to foolishly eject it, anyway! "Yes, that's why I have already clicked the icon. DOH!" I will then get a sheet drop down on the dialog asking if I want to "force eject" the CD. Once again, I dutifully click the "Yes, stupid" button. The CD then ejects and the dialog is replaced with one that makes sure I know that I have performed an unnatural act on the CD and that I must atone for that by clicking a third button to confirm my sin! I assume that this information is transmitted to Apple and possible all music labels, even though it was not even copyrighted material.
Why is this happening?! Not the notification thing, I realize my every action is critically important to some advertiser, but the
refusal to eject the CD.