- Oct 11, 1999
- 23,578
- 1
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Originally posted by: Aflac
AAC is pretty much proprietary to iPods/iTunes, yes.
What is your question?
Originally posted by: n30
If you use iTunes to buy music, you have to buy an iPod for the music to be portable.
Bastards.
Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Originally posted by: n30
If you use iTunes to buy music, you have to buy an iPod for the music to be portable.
Bastards.
Ok, that begs the next question....
Is there a converter available to convert ACC to MP3 or even WMA??
Originally posted by: n30
If you use iTunes to buy music, you have to buy an iPod for the music to be portable.
Bastards.
Originally posted by: Raduque
Originally posted by: n30
If you use iTunes to buy music, you have to buy an iPod for the music to be portable.
Bastards.
Wrong, it's time consuming, but you can burn them to a CDR and re-rip them to MP3.
Originally posted by: IAteYourMother
why is your music in AAC??
Why wouldn't you pay for the pod? I got one free for opening a chase credit account. Personally, I have the Rio Forge and have used it mercilessly for about a year with no trouble.
Originally posted by: Electric Amish
I (currently) don't need a multi-gig, multi-hundred dollar MP3 player. I've been living with a 512mb player that's only 3/4 full for the past year. I just want something cheap that will fit my needs.
Originally posted by: CKent
You lose sound quality going from one lossy format to another.
There are flash based ipods that should fit the bill for size, capacity and price.