an aac format is an...
acc format :)
AAC-format
Considering that you are talking about media player format i.e. .aac I would what supports such file format are media player. So, media player over Android supports .aac format.
You need to change the music format to AAC.
aac is a type of file format, just like mp3 is.
mp3, aac
Yes
Memory Stick™ Video Format- MPEG-4 Simple Profile (AAC)- H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Main Profile (CABAC) (AAC) and Baseline Profile (AAC)MP4- MPEG-4 Simple Profile (AAC)- H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Main Profile (CABAC) (AAC) and Baseline Profile (AAC)AVI- Motion JPEG (Linear PCM)- Motion JPEG (μ-Law)
You can get AAC files on iTunes a few different ways: 1. In Finder, select your AAC files, and either open them or drag them onto your iTunes logo in your dock to add them to your iTunes library; 2. In your iTunes library, select the MP3 files you would like to convert into AAC format, then choose Advanced from the menu bar and select "Create AAC Version"; 3. Songs purchased from the iTunes Store are in AAC format, and they are added to your iTunes library automatically; 4. To import songs in AAC format from a CD, choose iTunes from the menu bar and select "Preferences". Under "General" select "Import Settings", and choose pick "AAC Encoder" from the drop-down list beside "Import Using".
Right click on the track you wish to convert in your iTunes music library and then select Create AAC Version from the menu that appears.
MP3, WAV, AAC, Apple Lossless, MPEG4, AIFF
It takes up less space then MP3 and it supposedly is better quality then MP3. When you buy something from the iTunes store, they're music is in AAC format.
Not the same! A song in a commercial CD usually/ normally was stored in an AIFF format. If you imported/ converted this song into an AAC format, then there will be some quality lost. And, if you then export/ convert this song (from AAC format into AIFF), that lost part is never be regained; the later AIFF song is not the same with the first(original) one.