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Word: mp3 (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...feel, a sharp, white-backlit screen and an easy-to-understand menu rivaling Apple's famously user-friendly interface. At $250, the 6-GB version costs the same as a 6-GB iPod mini; it's also smaller, plays tunes in the Windows Media Audio format as well as MP3, and when you throw in the radio and recording features, it might be a better deal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Electronics: Attack of the Anti-iPods | 4/3/2005 | See Source »

...mentions is Steve Jobs' best-selling MP3 player. "What is the iPod?" Otellini asks, and his answer sounds strange from the mouth of a man with the well-manicured looks of a successful accountant. "It's my music machine, man. That's what you want. This," and here he gestures to a laptop across the conference room at Intel headquarters, "is my content machine. That [desktop] PC is my productivity machine. You have to start by thinking about the things people want to do with computers and work backward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Biz Briefs: A New Brain For Intel | 4/3/2005 | See Source »

...January 2004, was abandoned in November when the cost of production became prohibitive. Waggish engineers made a disco ball out of defunct LCOS chips for Intel's holiday party. The company also blundered on its pricing of flash-memory chips, the kind found in cameras and the smallest of MP3 players; in both flash memory and chips for servers, Intel found itself losing ground to its biggest rival, Advanced Micro Devices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Biz Briefs: A New Brain For Intel | 4/3/2005 | See Source »

...digital camera? MP3 player? Digital camcorder? Then you probably have many digital goodies to preserve. It's risky to keep them solely on your computer's hard drive-catch a bad virus and you could lose the whole lot. You should back them up. One way to do it is to copy all those photos, songs and videos to an external hard drive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Spring Cleaning For Your PC | 3/27/2005 | See Source »

...iTunes music store verifies this principle. The recording industry could have deployed a legal and effective solution like iTunes immediately after online music began to gain popularity; instead, they sued scores of consumers and resisted the inevitability of the fall of the CD and the rise of the MP3. The result is a nation of bitter consumers, depressed music sales, and rampant illegal file sharing. There is an iTunes service that, while successful, would have been immeasurably more successful had it been activated years earlier—before the spread of illicit services like Kazaa and Limewire. As it turned...

Author: By Andrew M. Trombly, ANDREW M. TROMBLY | Title: Caught Up In Copyright Law | 3/25/2005 | See Source »

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