[Excellent Compatibility] Playback recorded content on virtually all CD players, (including CD car stereos), gaming systems, CD/ DVD /BD drives, and CD/ DVD /BD players. Additional Details Small Business This product is from a small business brand. Support small. Learn more This product...
Customers could find anything electronic, ranging from washers and dryers to TVs and car stereos. But in 2008 the brand began closing its stores after 59 years, due to a variety of factors. F.W. Woolworth Nolichuckyjake // Shutterstock F.W. Woolworth In 1879, F.W. Woolworth was the ...
making a one-stop shop for everything from televisions and stereos to refrigerators and automobiles, which spun off into CarMax. At its height, Circuit City had 1,520 stores across the United States and Canada. But in the 1990s, that began to change...
making a one-stop shop for everything from televisions and stereos to refrigerators and automobiles, which spun off into CarMax. At its height, Circuit City had 1,520 stores across the United States and Canada. But in the 1990s, that began to change...
Back in the 1970s and 1980s, Circuit City was on top of the electronics game. It helped to pioneer the big-box concept, making a one-stop shop for everything from televisions and stereos to refrigerators and automobiles, which spun off into CarMax. At its height, Circuit City had 1,52...
Back in the 1970s and 1980s, Circuit City was on top of the electronics game. It helped to pioneer the big-box concept, making a one-stop shop for everything from televisions and stereos to refrigerators and automobiles, which spun off into CarMax. At its height, Circuit City had 1,52...
Mp3 plays on almost all portable music players including some types of CD players (Mp3 CD, anyone?). They also play on almost all home DVD players and some factory car stereos (standard!). Thus, if the quality is the same, obviously you want to go with the one that you can use in...
ACC only plays on the iPod, Zune, and a couple others. In the car stereo market, quite a bit more. The last time I thumbed through Crutchfield's catalog, about 1/3 of the aftermarket car stereos sold will play unprotected AAC files (usually from CD, but a few from USB or SD ...
It's part of the MPEG spec, just like MP3 is. It's actually quite popular on car stereos (about 30-40% of the units sold today have support.) But I fail to see how this would affect the studios. Once you're selling a non-DRM format, they're all equivalent, since anybody can ...