tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6057799.post114359173011747806..comments2023-03-26T18:47:47.424-05:00Comments on --Mike--: DRMMike Warothttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12975818268596648269noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6057799.post-1143606614847513662006-03-28T22:30:00.000-06:002006-03-28T22:30:00.000-06:00Not really, Mike. Every iTMS track I own can be co...Not really, Mike. Every iTMS track I own can be converted to MP3. I do it now whenever I want to use Roxio Jam, which used to handle Fairplay tracks until Apple squelched it. So now I just play the tracks and have Wiretap Pro save them as MP3s. <BR/><BR/>Loss of quality?<BR/><BR/>Probably. But I can't hear it.<BR/><BR/>I also have a few hundred vinyl albums sitting under the stairs in my ex-wife's house. They didn't move with my other stuff. Nor did I especially want them to. Not to mention a few hundred cassettes I threw out years ago because they were more trouble to cart around than they were worth listening to. <BR/><BR/>DRM is just another modern minor inconvenience in a world filled with greed, injustice, fear and suffering. <BR/><BR/>I'm young and innocent enough not to get excited about DRM. <BR/><BR/>But I understand all the points the anti-DRM proponents make. They're just idealists with misplaced ideals.<BR/><BR/>In my opinion, of course.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com