Thursday, November 09, 2006

Get The Most From Your MP3 Music Files


Invented in Europe MP3 technology, which stands for MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, is a popular digital encoding format that greatly reduces the amount of data needed for an accurate reproduction of many different types of audio, music being the most popular.

The MP3 movement is one of the most amazing phenomena that the music industry has ever seen. And it all started with a massive audience of music lovers on the Internet. Considered the next generation in audio technology, the MP3 format will continue to have, an enormous impact on how people collect, listen to and distribute music.

Get Started Today

Knowing how the MP3 format works isn't half as interesting as using it. The MP3 format and the Internets ability to promote and distribute MP3 files -- has done several things for music:

• It has made it easy for anyone to distribute music inexpensively.
• It has made it easy for anyone to find music and access it instantly.
• It has taught people a great deal about manipulating sound on a computer.

The third bullet point was unintentional yet significant. A large component of the MP3 movement is the fact that it has brought an assortment of unique applications to personal computers and given individuals the ability to discover how the technology works. Below are just a few of the things that this technology allows you to do:

• Download MP3 files from the Internet and play them on or PC.
• Store hundreds if not thousands of MP3 files on CDs and MP3 players.
• Rip (Copy) a song from your music collection into MP3 format and transfer it to your PC.
• Create custom play lists for different types of activities, such as jogging or relaxing.
• Transfer MP3 files onto small, portable MP3 players.
• Record an original song and convert it to an MP3 file.
• Copy MP3 files onto CDs and create your own music library.
• Add MP3 music files to your personal web pages

All that’s needed to achieve these exciting things is a computer with a sound card, a high-speed Internet connection, a CD Drive, and an MP3 Player. Chances are if you’ve purchased a computer in the last two or three years you already have most of this equipment.


Taking the Files With You
The creation of tiny portable MP3 players, such as the Apple iPod has catapulted the proliferation of MP3 downloads across the Internet. Players plug directly into your computer's parallel, FireWire or USB port allowing you to drag and drop music files directly to your MP3 player. Many of today’s players hold up to 20,000 songs, up to 25,000 photos, and up to 100 hours of video — or any combination of each.

It’s now commonplace to see individuals with MP3 players in your local gym, the mall, on public transportation, parks and even in the workplace enjoying their favorite types of music. Millions of songs are downloaded from hundreds of different websites on a daily basis. It has literally changed the way the music industry operates.

This trend in MP3 players has not gone unnoticed by the world’s automobile and truck manufacturers. Many companies such as GM, Ford, BMW, Honda, Volkswagen, Mercedes, Acura, Infinity and Peterbilt have all embraced this technology, allowing you to plug your player directly into your vehicles sound system. Thus giving you access to exactly the type of music you want. Don’t have a new car and still want to take your music with you? No problem. Companies such as Harman/Kardon, Pioneer, Alpine and Kenwood have adaptors that fit any type of vehicle.

Get In Sync

With the advent of the new generation docking stations on the market you now have the ability to sync-up your MP3 player to your homes audio system. Players can also be purchased with custom speakers as a standalone Hi-fi system, putting your music at your fingertips not in those numerous and bulky CD cases.

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