grabacontroller Posted July 21, 2006 Share Posted July 21, 2006 Do you have to buy music from the Itunes store in order for you to play music on your IPod? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheFiresInTheSky Posted July 21, 2006 Share Posted July 21, 2006 no. you can rip CD's onto your computer and put them on there using their software. you can do the same thing with any MP3's that you have on your computer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Andavari Posted July 21, 2006 Moderators Share Posted July 21, 2006 If you're going to use iTunes to rip your own audio cd's to either AAC or MP3 make sure you enable error correction in the iTunes CD drive configuration! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eldmannen Posted July 22, 2006 Share Posted July 22, 2006 If you use iTunes then reformat your computer, I heard you must buy all your music again... And it don't support Ogg Vorbis and FLAC. Aff! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oli Posted July 22, 2006 Share Posted July 22, 2006 you can use winamp to sync to your ipod aswell Homer: I never apologise, im sorry Lisa. Thats just the way i am Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kobrakommander56 Posted July 22, 2006 Share Posted July 22, 2006 yeah you are correct, unlike services like say Steam, Itunes offers no way to backup your purchases so if your computer crashes you sir are s**t out of luck. I use foobar2000 Insert random C4 joke here. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Andavari Posted July 22, 2006 Moderators Share Posted July 22, 2006 That's just another reason why DRM'd music sucks, and DRM'd music is something I'll neeeever, eeeever be a consumer of. Edit: Although Windows Media Player sucks, at least it's licenses can be backed up, kudos to MS on that one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eldmannen Posted July 23, 2006 Share Posted July 23, 2006 Same for me, never ever DRM-crippled music for me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PS3 Posted July 23, 2006 Share Posted July 23, 2006 Do you have to buy music from the Itunes store in order for you to play music on your IPod? no, i havent ever done that. i just download my music from limewire and then transfer it to my ipod. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zaphirer Posted July 24, 2006 Share Posted July 24, 2006 You can use a regular MP3 player like creative's Zen or Zen micro. I've got a creative MuVo and it works great. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IncredibleHawk Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 Now why tell someone what you have and not give him the product? Im just curious! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mushu13 Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 Last I checked you can bypass the iTunes protected music by burning the song to an audio cd then ripping it back to the computer as a mp3. They call them fingers, but I've never seen them fing, or ger. WOAH there they go!!!!!!! ~Otto How to use CCleaner on a Flash Drive (pre v2.0) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Andavari Posted July 30, 2006 Moderators Share Posted July 30, 2006 Last I checked you can bypass the iTunes protected music by burning the song to an audio cd then ripping it back to the computer as a mp3. The problem is that is transcoding, and will loose allot of quality. It's best to not support any DRM'd music in the first place, and thus there won't be a problem with it! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators rridgely Posted July 30, 2006 Moderators Share Posted July 30, 2006 Exactly burn a low quality drm mp3 to a disc and then put it back on your computer and then burn it again. If you have a nice sound system in your living room try listening to it on that and see how truely awefull it is! I know that the walmart site gives their music in 128kb wma format. That is such low quality that even the first time you burn it to a disc it sounds like crap. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Andavari Posted July 30, 2006 Moderators Share Posted July 30, 2006 I know that the walmart site gives their music in 128kb wma format. That is such low quality that even the first time you burn it to a disc it sounds like crap. WMA at 128 k/bits doesn't make my ears happy at all, to much artifacts for me, and doesn't start sounding good/acceptable to me unless it's at 192 k/bits or higher if using WMA VBR mode, but still then I wouldn't choose it. For lossy audio formats it's hands down LAME MP3 (compatible with anything), and Ogg Vorbis (gaining more and more hardware support). For lossless audio it's WavPack. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zaphirer Posted July 31, 2006 Share Posted July 31, 2006 Oggs are pretty good, just waiting it to gain more popularity. My MP3 player will only play WMAs and MP3s. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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