Friday, December 2, 2011

Does the iTunes store encode their music in a specific way?

Does the Apple iTunes store still encode their music in a specific way, so like it is not just a .mp3 but a specific kind of file extension specific to apple products? I know there are ways to convert them to .mp3 just curious if they still do this.





on a side question, does napsters downloading service do this also?|||I don't know about napster, they probably use some type of DRM. Ya apple still encodes their music. Some songs (not all) costing something like 10 cents more have no DRM (Digital Rights Management) on them. Therefore you can burn them on a CD, share them etc. |||iTunes has its own way to play and protected its files.





You can convert your music to MP3 with music converter. Then you can use iTunes music in other players freelly.


You can find it at http://www.protectedmusicconverter.net


There is a user guide to tell you how to convert protected music to unprotected mp3 format in step. The page is http://www.protectedmusicconverter.net/c鈥?/a>





Hope it will help you and save your time.

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