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Mac DVD Burning – Mp3s For Your Ipod By Itunes

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March 30, 2010 by admin

Mp3s For Your Ipod By Itunes

iTunes is a program application for digital media players that is created to play and organize digital video and music files. It is an interface that manages files and other content on the Ipod and was also recently introduced on the iPhone as well. When connected to the iTunes online store, users can download and purchase music, audiobooks, full length films, games, music videos, podcasts, TV shows and ringtones.
ITunes is downlodable for free for operating systems such as Windows XP, Windows Vista and Mac OS X from Apple’s website. Moreover, it is incorporated in all Mac computers as well as in some Dell and HPs.
ITunes users can organize music into playlists in one or multiple libraries, copy files and other content to a digital audio player, modify file information, re-record CDs, transfer music into a CD or DVD, create a visualizer that displays graphics for music as well as encode music into different audio formats. It also has a huge selection of online radio stations that you can choose from.

ITunes has become more improved with the launch of the version 7, making it an even more popular music software program available in the market today. iTunes version 7 has more enhanced video functions, new options for viewing the music library and a sophisticated ring tone editing for the iPhone.

You can search videos and music faster. Also, its new view option, known as the Album and Cover Flow, enable you to stylishly flip through the CDs. Moreover, the built-in video player can store downloaded files from the iTunes store and your own files in one fit. With more movies now available at the iTunes online store, picture quality of movies is better than ever with a 640×480 resolution.

The same old popular features of the iTunes remain intact, which include smooth iPod integration, CD burning, file ripping capability in multiple formats excluding WMA, label printing, network sharing and many others. Version 7 of iTunes also comes with little changes in iPhone support.

Other features of the iTunes include integrated podcasts, parental controls and a savvy-shuffle feature. However, it may sometimes be heavy on Windows and may cause traffic in its processor.
Meanwhile the iTunes online music store offers over a million songs from five big music companies, including over 600 independent labels. Other features are free downloading, good qualit
1000
y encoding for MP3s and AACs from audio CDs, over 250 free online radio stations, custom playlist burning to CDs, DVD burning for music backup, cross-platform network sharing, smart playlists and many more.

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Your CCNA exam success depends on your mastery of networking, routing, and switching fundamentals. Those fundamentals have to include knowledge of MAC addresses, so let’s take a close look at Media Access Control addressing.

A typical MAC address looks something like this:

af-14-b3-c2-14-45

You may be wondering why we’ve got letters and numbers in this address. MAC addresses are expressed in hexadecimal, which gives us the ability to express more values with the same number of bits. Theoretically, every single NIC in the world should have a totally unique MAC address, and the only way to do this is to express MAC addresses in hexadecimal.

MAC addresses are actually made up of two parts, so let’s take another look at the one I showed you earlier.

af-14-b3-c2-14-45

The first half of that address (af-14-b3) is the Organizationally Unique Identifier. This particular OUI would belong to one and only one vendor, making it “organizationally unique”. The second half of the address is a combination of hex characters that this particular vendor has not used before with this particular OUI, sometimes called the Device ID.

Breaking the example down into its two parts:

· af-14-b3 is the OUI

· c2-14-45 is the Device ID

In this way, the MAC address should be unique from any other MAC address in existence. (The use of hex means we can have 281,474,976,710,656 possible combinations.)

Note the highest hex value is f. If all values in a MAC address are set to f, that’s the MAC broadcast address. Expressing a hex value in upper or lower case does not change the value, so both of the following are the same address.

Watch out for any MAC address that contains a letter that comes after “F” in the alphabet – that’s an invalid address. For example, both of the following MAC addresses are invalid.

11-22-33-44-55-hf

Rf-12-34-45-56-67

MAC addresses can be expressed with hyphens, as we’ve seen so far in this chapter, or with colons. They can also be expressed in a format similar to IP addresses. To illustrate, all of the following MAC addresses are the same address and are all valid ways of expressing a MAC address.

aa-bb-cc-dd-ee-34

aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:34

aabb.ccdd.ee34

While we spend most of our time working with IP addresses, data can’t be transmitted from one point to another without the right MAC addresses. In tomorrow’s CCNA exam tutorial, we’ll take a look at how switches build a table of MAC addresses and the actions a switch can take with incoming frames. See you then

About The Author

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage (http://www.thebryantadvantage.com ), home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials, and The Ultimate CCNA and CCNP Study Packages.

For a copy of his FREE “How To Pass The CCNA” or “CCNP” ebook, visit the website and download copies! Our new RSS feed gives you free Cisco questions and tutorials daily!

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