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I had a former editor stay with us earlier this year, and he had iPod/iTunes with him and on his maclaptop. When he downloaded a number of tracks to my media server (PC,XP SP3, the lot) they were all off-balanced to the right a bit. It drove me nuts until I faulted the files themselves. Do iPod users get this a lot? It would seem like the kind of 'copy protection' they'd build into the system. From: "Sjaak" <tcplugin@scarlet.be> >> Bob Amstadt: >> What exactly does this mean to the end consumer. Can I transfer a >> DRM-free track to any of my computers without having to associate those >> computers with my iTunes account? Can I turn a DRM-free track into an >> MP3 file for transfering to CD for my car? > > Hi Bob, > I'm a long time iTunes store user. DRM-free means you get 256 Kbps, >Apple > calls that a "iTunes Plus" song. Proteced songs are 128 Kbps AAC files. > > And yes, you can convert iTunes plus files to mp3 and burn them on CD >for > your car. That's what I do all the time because I have no iPod. And all > from iTunes itself, no problem. > > PS I just checked the iTunes store here: NOT all songs are Drm-free yet! > --- > Sjaak > http://www.livelooping.be/ > http://www.overgaauw.be/ > http://www.myspace.com/sjaakovergaauw > > __________________________________ > Scarlet schrapt de downloadlimiet! > ADSL20 NO LIMIT voor ? 19,95. > Meer info op www.scarlet.be > > > > > >