chachee52 08:27 AM 01-22-2012
So I am a "have to buy CD" person. I love taking the CD and looking at the insert book while I listen to new music. I have only ever bought one album on I-tunes. I have been taking my CDs and uploading them to a hard drive to save them.
I'm heading on a trip and thought that I'd transfer some of my music onto my Droid (Lg Thunderbolt to be exact). I have all the music onto my SD card, but the only thing that won't show up on the music program is the one I-tunes album. It is also the only music that when I look at the properties is "protected".
What am I missing here? Can this album not play on my Droid? they are all MPEG4 files so I don't see why it can't except it being protected.
Thanks for any help.
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irratebass 08:46 AM 01-22-2012
Try Double Twist, it's basically an I-pod for your droid. You have to go onto
http://doubletwist.com/ and synch it to your phone, I have had no problems with it. It's free unless you want album art then there is a fee. Let me know if you have any problems.
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Fordman4ever 09:47 AM 01-22-2012
or try google music. you get all of your music and it doesn't take up any space on your phone.
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irratebass 10:38 AM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by Fordman4ever:
or try google music. you get all of your music and it doesn't take up any space on your phone.
:-) never knew this or heard of it thanks for the info.
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Thrak 11:21 AM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by Fordman4ever:
or try google music. you get all of your music and it doesn't take up any space on your phone.
assuming you have an internet connection... in a 2G area? Wont work well... looking to listen on that long plane trip? Have to pony up for the in-flight internet...
Otherwise, you still store stuff on your phone.
I use a program called Cubed (superscript-3 in the market) and love it, even has an EQ. Free album art and can use local pics or internet for the art source.
To get around your m4p issue from iTunes, google how to convert m4p to mp3, theres alot of free programs that will do that.
And fwiw, you have an Android phone, not a Droid. A Droid is a line of phones from Motorola... I hate that they did that, it causes so much confusion.
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chachee52 11:46 AM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by Thrak:
And fwiw, you have an Android phone, not a Droid. A Droid is a line of phones from Motorola... I hate that they did that, it causes so much confusion.
Your right, sorry!!! My bad
:-)
I will try to download another program. Was trying to avoid another program but looks like that's what I'm going to have to do. Is there an I-tunes program? Maybe I'll look into that too.
Thanks guys!! Looks like I'll do a little research before the football games today.
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MikeyC 12:26 PM 01-22-2012
It doesn't matter what type of app you use to play the music. The problem is that you're trying to play an MPEG-4
protected file. You need to convert it to an MP3 and then it's easy to play. There are programs on the internet you can use to do this they cost around $40. Since you only have 1 album to convert you can just burn the songs onto a blank CD and then re-load them to iTunes as MP3 files off of the CD. The downside to this method is then you'll have to type in the name, artist, and album info for each song. I recently did this for a couple hundred songs when I switched from an iPhone to a Droid. It was a major hassle for that many songs and I should have just bought some software. If it was just one album it should be no problem.
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Chainsaw13 01:17 PM 01-22-2012
You can select the songs in iTunes and have it create mp3 versions. Select then right click, select create mp3. Then just copy to your phone.
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chachee52 06:30 PM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by MikeyC:
It doesn't matter what type of app you use to play the music. The problem is that you're trying to play an MPEG-4 protected file. You need to convert it to an MP3 and then it's easy to play. There are programs on the internet you can use to do this they cost around $40. Since you only have 1 album to convert you can just burn the songs onto a blank CD and then re-load them to iTunes as MP3 files off of the CD. The downside to this method is then you'll have to type in the name, artist, and album info for each song. I recently did this for a couple hundred songs when I switched from an iPhone to a Droid. It was a major hassle for that many songs and I should have just bought some software. If it was just one album it should be no problem.
I found out that the player program didn't work. there was a converter program that had a trial version that transfered the first 3min of each song. The good news was it was a Dropkick album so none of the songs were 3min!!! This did work. the CD burning sounds like a good idea too.
Originally Posted by Chainsaw13:
You can select the songs in iTunes and have it create mp3 versions. Select then right click, select create mp3. Then just copy to your phone.
I tried this and didn't seem to do the trick. Don't know if I did it wrong, but I couldn't get it to work on the phone.
Just another reason i hate Apple!!!
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MikeyC 07:08 PM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by Chainsaw13:
You can select the songs in iTunes and have it create mp3 versions. Select then right click, select create mp3. Then just copy to your phone.
You can't do this with
protected MP4's only unprotected ones. When iTunes first opened up they were selling only protected MP4 files to quell the anti-piracy histerics going on in the record industry after the whole Napster thing. Later everyone relaxed and now they sell unprotected MP4's. When Apple made the change you could convert your protected files to unprotected ones for a discounted rate.
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Chainsaw13 08:08 PM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by MikeyC:
You can't do this with protected MP4's only unprotected ones. When iTunes first opened up they were selling only protected MP4 files to quell the anti-piracy histerics going on in the record industry after the whole Napster thing. Later everyone relaxed and now they sell unprotected MP4's. When Apple made the change you could convert your protected files to unprotected ones for a discounted rate.
Ah, forgot about this. You could always burn the tracks to a cd, then use any program to rip to mp3.
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goomer 08:11 PM 01-22-2012
MikeyC 10:16 PM 01-22-2012
Originally Posted by goomer:
Get an Iphone. :-)
Why would anyone want an iPhone when they could have a Droid. Android is a far superior operating system.
:-)
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chachee52 06:03 AM 01-23-2012
Originally Posted by goomer:
Get an Iphone. :-)
Originally Posted by MikeyC:
Why would anyone want an iPhone when they could have a Droid. Android is a far superior operating system. :-)
I second Mikey. If you missed one of the earlier posts of mine: "Just another reason for me to hate Apple!!"
Plus the new I-phone isn't even 4G.
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Thrak 06:38 AM 01-23-2012
Actually, nothing in the US is 4G...
I hate apple, but the dual antenna '3G' speed of the new 4S is really impressive from a technology standpoint.
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MikeyC 02:08 PM 01-23-2012
Originally Posted by Thrak:
Actually, nothing in the US is 4G...
I hate apple, but the dual antenna '3G' speed of the new 4S is really impressive from a technology standpoint.
Tell that to my Samsung Droid Charge on the Verizon LTE 4G network. I've run speed tests on it several times and it's around 10 times faster than the 3G network.
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chachee52 06:10 PM 01-23-2012
My LG Thunderbolt is also running 4g. And my patient is the one that is setting up the
4g network in the area, ao I don't know what you mean by "Nothing in the US is 4G"
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backwoods357 08:58 PM 01-23-2012
Anyone here using At&t LTE? I read the initial deployment was blazing fast, but on the other hand so was 3g when it first dropped (relatively). I hope once it gets saturated it can still perform. I know Verizon's LTE here in ATL is amazing.
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Thrak 06:44 AM 01-24-2012
ktblunden 08:23 AM 01-24-2012
This is the problem the music industry is having with the digital format. They refuse to adapt to it. When you buy a product you should be able to use it however you see fit, but unfortunately they see the digital format as an excuse to lock you into only being able to play the file on one device. Thus you have an entire market created for breaking the copy protection on files so people can play them on another device or burn them to a CD to listen to in the car. I understand they're trying to limit piracy, but treating your customers as criminals is not the answer.
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