Naturally as a ProTools user I can figure out a workaround to put the music I've paid for in a place that I can enjoy it easily, but somebody in the industry can surely come up with a better, fairer way. The Liquid Player will burn tracks to CD.but only for a extremely limited number of CD-RW drives.and the internal Apple drive is not on the list.Īnyone else frustrated by this? I'd love to support this service (or another like it-please, Apple, purchase Universal), but as it's set up now, it doesn't make sense for me to.
There is only a Liquid Player for use when booted in OS 9.and not in OS X or Classic. Mac users can only listen to the tracks they purchase and download on the Liquid Player itself. So I was thrilled when I found I could buy songs and play them back with Liquid Audio. You can play an unlimited number of sounds concurrently or one at a time. You may want to check out more Mac applications, such as MIDI to MP3 Converter, Export MP3 Playlist V or Any MP3 Converter, which might be similar to Simple MP3 Player. Play Sound is a simple, no-fuss sound player that supports QuickTime sound files (for example, AIFF or MP3 files), Classic Mac OS System 7 sound files (files with a file type of 'sfil' that contain 'snd ' resources), or any 'snd ' resources embedded into any file. I know too many musicians who are barely making a living to feel comfortable ripping anyone off. The new design features controls just like the ones on a hand-held MP3 player: Play, Pause, Rewind, Fast-forward. I love the idea of paying for music on the internet. Mac g4 running os 9 needs driver for MP3 player in order to work.