E-Z Guide to a Digital Revolution
By: Source: AARP.org Date Posted: 2007-02-01 19:48:55.778246-05:00
By Erik Sherman
Starting more than two decades ago, the audio compact disc unleashed a revolution in how we listen to music. It brought about a whole new way to store and listen to sound with digital files that use patterns of zeroes and ones. Slowly, then quickly, analogue music on large vinyl records that had spun at a warped and wobbly 33, 45, or 78 rpm began a march to extinction. Meanwhile, this digital music revolution has accelerated and branched into a dazzling array of 21st-century innovations. Today, the Internet, along with software that lets you enjoy digital music directly through your computer, has taken music collections from the bookshelf and converted them to bytes on computer hard drives and devices that fit in your hand. But as music products and services have become married to the computer, they often result in some serious head scratching. Spend a few minutes with this E-Z Guide for answers to some fundamental questions.
What is Digital Music?
It’s music -- or other types of sound, including audio books or dialogue on a DVD – encoded as bits of information similar to how computers store, retrieve, and transport other kinds of data. These bits reside on a compact disc or a computer hard drive in a handful of file types.
E-Z Guide to a Digital Revolution
What is Digital Music?
Where Can I Find Digital Music?
How Should I Manage My Digital Music?




Share
preview