Shelby Craig

Social

Relationship Status

Married

Highschool

Gibbs High School

Interests

Religion, Music, Disc Golf

Somebody answer this

November 29 2005
If I subscribe to Napster and download all the music I want for $15 a month, could I not just burn that to a cd and upload that to iTunes and transfer to my iPod??  That would be a whole lot cheaper than $.99 a song.

Hodg-E

November 29 2005
what i have been told is you can burn to cd's, but im not sure i know when ever you stop paying you lose all of your songs. but i thank they have something on there so that you cant do that.

trumpetjaz

November 29 2005
if you stop paying, the next time you plug in your mp3 player, it will wipe all your songs off. course, if you burn a cd, should be fine i'd say go to walmart.com and spend $.88 a song, but you have a lousy ipod that won't accept .wma down with conformity ; )

Beautiful_Wreck

November 29 2005
Yea, You can do that. I don't even think that you need to burn it to a CD you can just locate where the file is on your computer, and move the file from point A to iTunes. Does that make sense?

Nathan Moore

November 29 2005
Here is the deal... other than Lacy needs to stop cracking at Apple products every opportunity she gets... she is just scared of a superior product... Napster songs come with Digital Rights Management that renders the songs useless if you ever stop your subscription to Napster... So inherently, you would not be able to do that with the music files from Napster. However, when you burn these songs to a CD, the DRM is in essence stripped. The audio files are converted to .wavs and stuck on the CD. These can then be ripped into iTunes just like any other audio CD, ultimately ridding the music of the Napster DRM, and thus, you have your music always and forever... as long as you both shall live. Hope that helps.