CNet
helps you get started
with digital music
July
2000
Digital music--like you listen to on your
CDs--has been around for a long time. But
everything is rapidly changing now in regard to
digital formats and the variety of ways that you
can access digital music. MP3, Napster, MiniDisc,
portable MP3 players, and more give you more of
what you want in increasingly convenient formats.
The greatest challenge is simply keeping up with
all the changes.
This is where CNet's
Music Center comes in. It's a wonderful site
for beginners who like music and who are eager to
plug in to all these new technologies that give
them an abundance of their favorite music. It has a
great variety of resources--just about everything
you need to get started. But even better, it
explains everything, even the most basic, such as
connecting your computer to your home stereo
system. If you're confused about things such as the
difference between MP3 and streaming audio, this is
the site for you.
The MP3 Launchpad section acknowledges that this
whole area is daunting because it encompasses
software, hardware, consumer electronics, the
Internet, and legal issues. It offers an effective
introduction to MP3, streaming audio, MiniDisc
players/recorders, and the importance of respecting
copyright law. It even has a link to a glossary of
terms related to digital audio.
The section reached via the Play Music link
helps you get started listening to Internet radio,
MP3s, and other digital formats. It gives tips if
you're having trouble playing MP3 music and offers
direction in regard to finding streaming audio
online. Here you'll also find reviews of products
such as MP3 player software, portable MP3 players,
and speakers. The Find Music section directs you to
MP3 search tools, which include not just the Web
but also ftp, newsgroups, and the infamous Napster.
It also tells you how to find streaming audio.
Once you learn how to download MP3 and listen to
it, then you face your next big challenge:
organizing your vast library of music. The Organize
Music section helps you do just that. It tells you
how you can store your music online, how to
organize it on your computer, and how to store it
on a CD by creating your own MP3 CDs. You can also
learn how to create standard CDs and even how to
create nice labels for your CD cases. The reviews
include information on the ever-cheaper devices
that create CDs.
Finally, much that you need to know about
creating digital music is available in the Create
Music section. It helps you convert, record, and
encode your music in the latest digital formats,
such as encoding MP3 from CDs and copying CDs.
© 2000 by Jim Karpen, Ph.D.
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