How To Play Your iTunes Music On Other Systems 243
ptorrone writes "Engadget has a step-by-step for the non-uber geek on how to play your purchased music from iTunes on other systems. To be clear, this isn't a way to take music you bought and give it to someone else, this is so you can listen to your own purchased music on other systems or devices. In fact, your personal info is still in the file."
strange name, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
From the article:
Now the application is called "hymn", or "hear your music anywhere"...
I would have called it "hyman" because it makes more sense. Then again, if the program crashed on you, I guess you'd have a busted hyman, so I see where they're coming from on that.
Why buy anyway? (Score:5, Funny)
la de la de la..
*cat suffers heart attack*
oh...thats why we buy.
Not necissarily (Score:4, Funny)
The S in TOS stands for service. The contract stiplulates the penalty for breaking the contract: refusal of service. Basically they say we reserve the right to refuse service to anyone who breaks our terms. The only thing Apple could do to you for breaking this "contract" is ban you. (of course the DMCA could possibly come into play somehow, but it is relatively untested)
I beat all the DRM for everything (Score:5, Funny)
Hey William Hung! (Score:5, Funny)
William Hung? Is that you?
Re:I have an easier method: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I have a way to do that too..... (Score:4, Funny)
It's a "howto". It explains that you 1) install the app 2) drag and drop protected iTunes files into it. It's newsworthy, in spite of this being the third or fourth time this app has been mentioned, because now it's got a new name (hymn). If you recall the earth-shaking story a few weeks ago that Darth Vader was going to have a new costume in the next SW pre/se/quel, though we didn't actually have an image or description, you know how low the bar is.