MP3, AIFF, WAV, MPEG-4, AAC and Apple Lossless (.m4a) including QuickTime's supported files.
iTunes files are standard MP3s or AAC format and so any equipment compatible with these formats will work.
e readers are compatible with itunes.
Tunebite re-records copy protected audio and saves it in a range of formats. Providing the saved material is in a format compatible with iTunes you can drag the saved files into the iTunes library.
Movies from iTunes are delivered in the H.264 format which is subset of the MPEG-4 format.
No, this is not compatible with i Tunes.
Only apple products are compatible with itunes, unless you download a converter software.
Mp4 is the file format compatible with iPod Touch.
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.
To have iTunes recognize an audiobook separately from your music files, make sure the file format is compatible with iTunes (such as M4B for audiobooks). You can also specify the media kind of the file in iTunes as "Audiobook" to categorize it correctly. This will help iTunes organize and list audiobooks separately from your music files.
The MP3 format was introduced in 1995 and the iTunes software appeared in 2001.
no
Yes, if you have a format that Apple does not use you can import it to iTunes and iTunes will convert it to the format that will work on your iPod.