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Originally posted by whisper
I think right now AAC format is only supported by iPod. It's not apple's fault, AAC is a standard format that any player could in principle utilize. No other company is using it yet tho.
lol. Agreed.Real just announced they'd be using it. Now watch them fuck it up
it IS apples fault you see because thats not real AAC. thats DRM laced AAC
In terms of buring the music to CD and then ripping to mp3, this *should* work although I can say that this did NOT actually work for me. I wasn't trying to transfer to an iRiver player tho, I was trying to go to minidisc. Sony's software is horrible to begin with so maybe that's the real problem, but none of the mp3s that I ripped could be converted to minidisc (ATRAC3) format. I checked all the advanced settings to make sure I was using a compatable bit rate and frequency, and the bottom line after many many tries is that it just didn't work. Although the WAV files should have been clean and free of DRM, something about them was not quite normal. So give it a try with whatever player you have, and hope for the best!But to answer your question, you could burn the tracks to an audio-cd, and then re-rip them as Mp3s.
Originally posted by KaosDG
Real just announced they'd be using it. Now watch them fuck it up
But to answer your question, you could burn the tracks to an audio-cd, and then re-rip them as Mp3s.
Originally posted by whisper
Okay, you're right in terms of the purchased music from the music store, but if you just rip songs from a CD into AAC format then that should be "real" AAC, correct?
Originally posted by JoJoFine
well then its just stupid. burn a lossy format on a cd then burn it again creating more loss....