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Is the music DRM protected?
That's quite odd, what if you re-transfer the files with mediago?
So not DRM related.
By the way, i refuse to use audio/video files with DRM.
I pay for a album, so i deside on what device i want to play it. Also in lots of countries (like mine The Netherlands) you can do more with mediafiles by law, then what the restrictions of the entertainment industry allows you to, and so the drm restrictions are officially illegal.
So best way is, buy CD (only with compact disc digital audio logo, to prevent rootkits and DRM) and rip it to FLAC or Ogg-Vorbis (open audio codings), then you're free to do whatever you want in a legal way, because you bought the CD.
Don't buy DRM'd media. The more we buy, the more limited the future of digital media is.
@tyw7 wrote:
Amazon MP3 and Google Play produce MP3 that are DRM free. Also ogg is not playable by many devices; it's not that cross platform and low end phones might not be able to play it.
Yeah, so weird, a open format unsupported. I hear that Ogg Vorbis is too complex for mobile devices and use too much battery power (their are Ogg-Vorbis audio players).
Mp3 is really outdated. (sorry but it's true, but hey i'm a audio engineer).
Their are many newer and better audio codecs that sound way better, and can work on mobile devices.
I'm happy that our Z1 supports Flac 16 & 24bit
I mean listen to the 'Audiophyle' version of Nine Inch Nails - Hesitation Marks album (so flac 24bit from 24bit source). Play it on your Xperia Z1 with Bluetooth headset with bigger is better drivers(headset/phone speakers diameter) and you'll be amazed over the sound quality, you'll never hear those low frequencies booming so good before with soundsettings on neutral.