Is MP3 Here To Stay? - Industry Trend Or Event Peter Brown Napster's downfall, Microsoft's machinations may be stalling the market It's been a little less than three years since the original Diamond Multimedia Rio MP3 player burst onto the consumer market. At the time of its debut, portable digital music was still a novelty and not easy to come by. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-11/
MP3 Portable Players Make Some Noise - Technology Information Peter Brown Downloading MPEG audio from Internet heats up San Jose -- The most surprising hit in the consumer electronics market in recent years is the downloadable MPEG audio portable player, which allows consumers the use of a portable handheld player to download audio off the Internet to be listened to at their leisure. The so-called MP3 players have been popping up as one of the top ten sellers on numerous on-line E-commerce sites. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-12/
MP3Why Is It So Hot? - Technology Information - Column Peter Brown San Jose It's time to examine why the new MP3 music format has generated so much excitement over the past few months. The MP3 phenomenon has spawned tons of interest. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-14/
The MP3 Youth Movement - Brief Article Todd Wasserman CE companies are pushing digital audio players for their 'coolness' as much as their profit margins. Being first to market is never easy but if you're lucky like S3, you'll get sued before your product ever hits the shelves. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-15/
MP3 Players Win : Court Rules Rio Does Not Violate Anti-piracy Laws - Industry Trend Or Event San Jose-In what can only be viewed as a major defeat for the recording industry, an appeals court recently ruled that Diamond Multimedia Systems' Rio MP300 did not qualify as a digital audio recording device and therefore does not violate federal anti-piracy laws. The 9th U. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-18/
The East Is Wired - China Gets MP3 - Brief Article Brian Doherty The corporate barons who own most pop music in the United States and Europe hate MP3, a computer-file format that makes it easy to post CD-quality music on the World Wide Web. Although it has so far mostly been used by unsigned acts and would-be pop stars to distribute their own music, record labels argue--not incorrectly--that MP3 also makes it easier to reproduce and distribute unauthorized versions of copyrighted material. http://www.free-mp3-downloads.com/articles/mp3-20/