Apple seems to have gotten what it wanted as a key licensing board freezes rates charged to iTunes and other digital music venues.
Two years after initially making a stink about the extensive copy protection in Apple's media marketplace, Norwegian authorities re-raise threats of legal action against the company.
A bombshell of a story reported that Apple once threatened to close iTunes if forced to pay higher royalties for music. A more careful reading of the Apple executive's statement shows that it was more of a veiled threat. Regardless, is it possible that Apple could shutter iTunes?
EMI Australia has partnered with UK-based digital media company 7digital to launch a DRM-free music store.
Got a bunch of video you want to put on your iPod? Here's how to get it into the right format for watching on the go.
Muxtape founder Justin Ouelette says the bureaucracy of the music industry was just too much for him to deal with.
Apple iTunes 8 is the industry standard for multimedia jukebox software and despite the need for a UI overhaul and some liposuction to remove the bloat, iTunes is a solid choice that most users will enjoy.
MySpace is today expected to launch MySpace Music, the service formed by the world's second largest social network and all four of the largest recording companies.
Mobile phone company Sony Ericsson announced on Tuesday that it will launch a new music service called PlayNow Plus, which will feature unlimited music downloads.
Rumours persist that Apple is interested in getting into music subscriptions, but given the current state of the market, is it a good idea?
Subscription music services have finally hit Australia with the launch of Vodafone's MusicStation and Microsoft-Sanity venture LoadIt.
Apple's decision that the Podcaster iPhone app is unfit for its App Store raises questions for developers and users alike.
Apple releases a new media player version and recommends that Windows users replace outdated drivers for webcam products, scanners and some media card readers.
Apple's improvements to iTunes have garnered the music and video jukebox a full-point jump, although long-time users will only find one major new feature and a few interesting smaller ones.
This tutorial can help you split music and audio books into shorter tracks for your convenient listening pleasure.
Many online music sites prefer to stream songs rather than serving them up as downloadable files. Here's a free way to record the audio as MP3s.
Add another possibility to the list of possible announcements at Apple's iPod event next week: a new version of iTunes.
iTunes is preconfigured to stream music over your home network, but you need the right hardware. Here are some products that will do the trick.
Dissatisfied with the listening experience offered by today's cheap, one-off music downloads? Here are five suggestions for hearing music the way it's meant to be heard.
MySpace Music will launch in September, according to Chris DeWolfe, the social network's CEO.
Apple iTunes 8 is the industry standard for multimedia jukebox software and despite the need for a UI overhaul and some liposuction to remove the bloat, iTunes is a solid choice that most users will enjoy.
If you want good music — right now, with minimal effort, wherever you are (so long as you have an Internet connection) — there's no reason not to take the Slacker Web Player for a spin.
iPod owners with a gym membership and a hankering to get in shape will be well served by PumpOne's PumpedForLife fitness software.
SlySoft CloneDVD Mobile excels at copying and reformatting nonprotected DVD video for iPod use, although it can't touch commercial discs.
Talking Panda's iRocker won't turn you into a guitar-shredding virtuoso overnight, but it can teach you enough to start writing your own songs.
2008/10/10 14:57:56
How to make your iPod Nano talk
2008/10/09 11:24:35
Planet CNET: Spooning at 40,000 feet
2008/10/09 09:20:25
Cracking open Apple's revamped iPod Nano
The new-model iPod Nano is tall, thin, and well-built. Maybe just a little too well-built for its own good. Let's smash it!
Step inside Sony's uchi, sorry, home
Sony unveiled an ultra-thin TV, a rubbable laptop and an unusual tube speaker, amongst other things at its Uchi event today.
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