i pod
Digital audio recording equipment first became available way back in the 1950's. Since then there have been many new laws put in place to regulate the use of this equipment.
The first ever digital audio player created was Kane Kramer's IXI, which never entered commercial production. The first iPod, I believe, was simply the iPod (I'm not entirely sure on the latter).
Sony first publicly demonstrated an optical digital audio disc in September 1976.
I think the fist album to be recorded, mixed and produced in all digital (DDD) was "brothers in arms" by Dire Straits.
In England Kane Kramer is a British inventor and businessman. He is credited with the initial invention of the digital audio player, in 1979. Kane was 23 and James Campbell 21. First Patent applied for 1981. Together they went on to pioneer Digital Recording designing and building the world's first solid state Digital Media Recorder/Players.
There is a combined headphone and optical digital audio output (minijack) socket. On the current iMacs it is the first socket on the back.
To convert audio from a CD to text, you can use speech recognition software. First, rip the audio tracks from the CD to a digital format (like WAV or MP3) using software such as iTunes or Windows Media Player. Then, employ a transcription tool or service, like Google Speech-to-Text or Otter.ai, to process the audio file and generate text. Ensure the audio quality is clear for better transcription accuracy.
D.A.B radio is Digital Audio Broadcasting, and basically means you can search the radio channels on a built-in keypad. I think that's it, but I'm not 100% sure...
Kane Kramer designed one of the earliest digital audio players, which he called the IXI. His 1979 prototype was capable of approximately 3.5 minutes of audio playback but it did not enter commercial production.
To use the GPX ML640S digital media player, first, power it on and insert a compatible SD card or USB drive containing your media files. Use the navigation buttons to browse through your files and select the one you want to play. The player supports various audio formats, so ensure your files are compatible. Adjust the volume and settings as needed to enhance your listening experience.
sounds like a problem i had with a cell phone once... a piece inside is broken... your best bet would be to return it and get a new one (also make sure its CHARGED first :P)
Eiger Labs MPMan F10 - March 1998. It had just 32MB of memory and weighed 2oz. * The Personal Jukebox (also known as PJB-100 or Music Compressor) was the first commercially sold hard disk digital audio player. Introduced late in 1999, it preceded the Apple iPod and similar players. (source - wikipedia)