Yes
iTunes files are standard MP3s or AAC format and so any equipment compatible with these formats will work.
After you have purchased the songs you will get them downloaded automatically to your computer. Since iTunes songs does not have any DRM protection any more you can simply copy them to your MP3-player of choice given that the player supports the AAC format. If the player does not support this format you have to download a converter app to convert the music into the MP3 format.
Use any kind of player that supports .avi format to play with. VLC player, BS Player and Media Player Classic are 3 good Players
depends what format your songs are in. the w350i, which i currently own, can only play mp3, aac, m4a. anything else won't be recognised as an audio file
download vlc media player...it plays anything and any format
No, the SWF file is a Flash player file. Any flash player can play it.
VLC Player can play any format I've ever given it.But BRRIP is not a format. You have to look at the extension of the file to see the type. Common ones are MP4, AVI, VOB, and MKV. VLC can play all of these.
You can play songs from anywhere on an iPod Touch providing they are in a suitable format - AAC , MP3, Audible, Apple Lossless, AIFF or WAV. These can be from the iTunes store, Amazon, or any other retailer with a download service, or from your own CD collection. Tracks from CDs are in the AIFF format which takes up a lot of space on your iPod but the iTunes software can convert these to the more compact MP3 or AAC formats.
Short answer: For most people, it's virtually impossible to hear the difference between a 256 kbps AAC audio file (which is currently the format available from iTunes) and a CD. If you're using very high quality sound equiptment, you may be able to hear a difference depending on how trained your ears are. Even then, it won't be very noticable. Still, AAC is a "lossy" format, so audio data is lost when you rip from a CD to AAC, even if your ears can't tell the difference. If you convert your AAC files to MP3 or any other "lossy" format, you will loose more sound quality with each conversion. That's partly why some audiophiles prefer to rip CDs to a lossless format such as FLAC and .wav files. These files take up much more space, but you won't loose any audio data.
Hi this is Abid download vlc media player you will surely be able to play Wav file. However, if you have got any media convertor you can change the file format as well.
The question is badly worded and it suggests to me that the person who submitted this question is either not fluent in english, and/or is not technologically inclined. An MP3 player IS a device. It plays music files that have been encoded using the MP3 format - hence the .mp3 extension. There are many brands of MP3 players but only one company, namely Apple, manufactures the Ipod. The Ipod also supports the AAC format, which is not compatible with any other MP3 players. However, there are programs that will convert music files from one format to another.
No. Itunes has it's own format that is not compatible. You may be able to burn the songs to a disc, then put them back into the computer from the disc... that may change the format. There are also converters you can download that will convert the Itunes mp4 format to an mp3 format.