What is Portable Audio?
It’s a digital audio file, typically an MP3, that you can listen to on a portable audio player. What do I need to hear portable audio? To listen to the tour on a portable media player you will need to transfer the MP3 file(s) from your computer to a portable media device. Software options to do this include the latest version of Apple’s iTunes (which has the software built in), or other services such as iPodder. You’ll also be able to listen to it on your computer (if your computer has a sound card and can play MP3 audio files). How do I get it? It’s FREE! Click DOWNLOAD next to the listing. You can also listen to streaming audio by selecting the LISTEN NOW option.
It’s a digital audio file, typically an MP3, that you can listen to on a portable audio player. What do I need to hear portable audio? To listen to the tour on a portable media player you will need to transfer the MP3 file(s) from your computer to a portable media device. Software options to do this include the latest version of Apple’s iTunes (which has the software built in), or other services such as iPodder. You’ll also be able to listen to it on your computer (if your computer has a sound card and can play MP3 audio files). How do I get it? It’s FREE! Click DOWNLOAD next to the listing. LISTEN NOW option.
Portable audio refers to mobile devices that can play digital music, such as MP3 players, cell phones, mini-disk players and boomboxes. A handheld digital voice recorder could also be considered portable audio, though the more common reference applies to musical electronics. Today’s generation likely takes portable audio for granted, but it wasn’t long ago that the only portable music available came in the form of an AM/FM radio. The first portable tapes, popular in the early 1970s, were large 8-track cassettes that resembled today’s VHS tapes. Not only were they cumbersome, but the technology left much to be desired. Any song that began on one track and ended on another would have an unwelcome disruption of several seconds of silence at the seam, as the player shifted from reading one track to the next, often with audible clunking. By the 1980s the cassette tape had improved enough to be well suited to musical recordings. One might consider cassettes to be the first viable form of por
Portable audio refers to mobile devices that can play digital music, such as MP3 players, cell phones, mini-disk players and boomboxes. A handheld digital voice recorder could also be considered portable audio, though the more common reference applies to musical electronics. Today’s generation likely takes portable audio for granted, but it wasn’t long ago that the only portable music available came in the form of an AM/FM radio. The first portable tapes, popular in the early 1970s, were large 8-track cassettes that resembled today’s VHS tapes. Not only were they cumbersome, but the technology left much to be desired. Any song that began on one track and ended on another would have an unwelcome disruption of several seconds of silence at the seam, as the player shifted from reading one track to the next, often with audible clunking. By the 1980s the cassette tape had improved enough to be well suited to musical recordings. One might consider cassettes to be the first viable form