Apple launches iTunes Music Store and new iPods Video
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Harry Potter, Madonna exclusively available on iTunes
At an Apple Computer press event in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs announces that all six Harry Potter novels and all of Madonna's music albums are now available exclusively as digital downloads from the iTunes Music Store. Jobs also rolls out iTunes 5.
Harry Potter, Madonna exclusively available on iTunes
At an Apple Computer press event in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs announces that all six Harry Potter novels and all of Madonna's music albums are now available exclusively as digital downloads from the iTunes Music Store. Jobs also rolls out iTunes 5.
Wi-Fi tunes coming to an iPod, iPhone near you
During his presentation in San Francisco on Wednesday, Apple CEO Steve Jobs discusses the new iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store, as well as the YouTube application that will be a feature on the new iPod Touch.
iTunes, the award-winning digital-jukebox software, is now available for Mac and Windows. The iTunes Music Store offers Windows users the same online music store as Mac users, with the same music catalog, the same personal-use rights, and the same 99-cents-per-song pricing. With music from all five major music companies and more than 600 independent labels, the iTunes Music Store catalog now offers more than 1,000,000 songs. Features include a free download with no hidden charges for extra features, MP3 and pristine-quality AAC-encoding from audio CDs, smart playlists, more than 250 free Internet radio stations, and the ability to burn custom playlists to CDs and MP3 CDs, to burn content to DVDs to back up an entire music collection, and to share music via Rendezvous over any network, cross-platform. New in this version: Enjoy a streamlined look, find stuff faster with the new Search Bar, control kids access with Parental Controls and hear more of what you love with Smart Shuffle.
Apple expands DRM-free music selection
At Macworld 2009 in San Francisco, Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of marketing, announces a new music price plan and an expanded selection of digital rights management-free songs in its iTunes Store. Users will be able to strip their existing DRM-wrapped music of the controversial copy protection software, but doing so will cost 30 cents per song.
Tekzilla Daily: Make songs easier to find in iTunes
iTunes makes it easy to find out which songs in your music library appear more than once. Listen to what Veronica has to say, and you'll be one step closer to clearing out room on your iPod.
Apple adds voice and photos to the iPod
Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces new accessories for the iPod music player, expanding its capabilities to include voice recording and photo storage.
Control iTunes with an iPod Touch or iPhone
Using the Apple-created Remote app for the iPod Touch or iPhone, learn to control your computer's iTunes music library.
The Return of Steve Jobs and an iPod refresh
Steve Jobs is back for Apple's annual music event showcasing an all-new iPod Nano with a video camera, an updated iPod Touch, iPod Classic, and Shuffle, the revamped iTunes 9, and iPhone OS 3.1.
Do you dare to download music and video from sources other than iTunes? CNET's Donald Bell shows off a new feature in iTunes 9 that lets you add media downloads to your iTunes library with a minimum of hassle.
