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If you are reading them as data discs then you will fit on way more mp3s than FLAC
As said above, the time limit on audio CDs is based on the running time of the music. It's about 80 minutes. The CD standard for music is 16 bit samples at a sample frequency of 44.1kHz. The best quality you'll get from the music you have is to use lossless files. FLAC is lossless (with some compression of data that can be retrieved without loss), as is ALAC (The Apple version) and WAV (which is uncompressed lossless). I download WAV files from my Bandcamp purchases.
So, if you can get the source files in FLAC, ALAC or WAV, do it. 44.1kHz/16bit WAV is best, because it's ready to be burnt to the CD without any conversion. FLAC or ALAC will need to be converted as part of the burn, so you'll need software that does it.
I can't help you with the software, because I use a Mac, not a PC. Media Player is a Windows tool, isn't it?
You can take MP3 files and turn them into CDs, but it won't sound as good if you have the choice of both. You'll need software to convert the files from the lower sample frequency (320k is common) to 44.1kHz for the WAV file.