In gnome there is an app that runs, which auto-plays CDs.  Try it:
just put in a CD and see if it starts by itself.  If it does, then
that's your problem - turn it off.  I turned mine off and my annoying
problems went away.  I can't remember how I did it though: something
like 'kill' or the gnome control panel or maybe both.

Oh well good luck!

- Bob Glover

> I justed to update people on the list about what I've discovered about my
> problems with running cdrecord on my new Linux box. At first, I had no
> problems, then I was unable to erase re-writable cds or complete the
> process of writing to recordable cds. I looked through all the newsgroups
> and talked to the VA Linux folks. I even emailed the author of cdrecord
> who said the log files showed nothing really wrong on cdrecord's end. He
> suspected a Linux kernel problem.
> 
> Turns out it was Gnome! I had been running cdrecord from the command line
> inside Gnome. Last night, as a lark, I thought I would quit out of Gnome
> and run tests without X. Everything worked great. And I think the reason
> things initially worked well was because I was running inside KDE, but
> then switched desktops to Gnome. 
> 
> Why on earth would running inside Gnome cause problems like that, spewing
> out error messages and scsi card timeout errors in my /var/log/message
> file? I would love to hear what people think. 
> 
> Gary 
[snip]


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