
02-07-2008, 06:31 AM
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Sage
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 676
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I'd say well over 90% of my music comes from CD's I had already purchased before going digital, just ripping my existing music collection (been buying CD's since 1985). Honestly, in the last 4 years since going digital I haven't been acquiring that much new music. Of new music, I'd still say that 90% is ripped from CD and 10% are digital downloads (mostly singles) from either iTunes or Amazon. Basically if I want the whole album I buy the CD, if I want just 1 track I do a download. My download store preferences run like this:
1. if it's available in iTunes Plus format (DRM-free 256kbps AAC) I get it from the iTunes Store.
2. otherwise if it's available on Amazon.com (as DRM-free 256kbps MP3) I get it there.
3. Only if 1&2 are not an option will I consider a DRM-ed "iTunes Minus" (my term) 128kbps AAC track from the iTunes Store. I may or may not have liberated said purchases using QTFairUse6 (which doesn't work with iTunes 7.6 btw)
I've also tried the Wal-Mart store (too many tracks available only in WMA which I don't do due to my investment in iPods, and too much censoring of explicit lyrics), 7digital (320kbps DRM-free MP3 with albums from Radiohead which at the time weren't available for download elsewhere although now they're on iTunes), and even lossless .flac downloads direct from artist's websites (Coil). Lossless .flac downloads of course remove my need for the physical CD and in the case of Coil, the CDs can be almost impossible to find anyway.
Just this week I toyed around with buying tracks on my iPhone. While this was strictly W?BIC, it was pretty neat. My wife was singing some 90's Brazilian tune to our son and I decided to whip out my iPhone and try to find it on the iTunes store. The search was quick and found the track right away, I played a 30-second sample to confirm it really was the correct track, the purchase only required me to enter my iTunes account password, and the download took less than a minute and soon I was playing the track over the iPhone's tinny little external speaker to my son's delight. Next time I synced my iPhone, the new track synced up to my desktop where I was then able to sync it down to our household's other iPods.
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64 GB iPad 2 WiFi, Apple TV 2, 32 GB iPhone 4
Early 2011 MacBook Pro 13" (dual boot with Windows 7), Early 2009 Mac Mini
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