If you want excellent audio quality and instant iPod access right in your car, then check out the Pioneer DEHP3000IB CD Receiver. Technology like the Supertuner IIID advanced analog and digital processing enhances your audio experience.
You also get crisp and clear sound quality from MP3, WMA, WAV, or AAC files: Just plug in any USB memory device or portable digital player, and get great results all the time! Moreover, with the built-in MOSFET 50W x 4 amplifier, you not only get excellent power and sound quality for four interior speakers, distortion is minimized as well.
Ditch the Factory-installed CD player Today!
The receiver has 2 RCA preouts so you can install additional amps and speakers so you can quickly upgrade your system. You can use the AUX input for connecting digital portable player or other external devices. This built-in input is located on the front panel for quick and convenient access! You can able enable Sirius radio’s Game Alert function provided you’re paying for the service.
Simply set up the receiver, and it instantly alerts you when your favorite sporting events are about to start.
The Pioneer DEHP3000IB CD Receiver has several special features so you can easily use your iPod® in your car. The brilliant LED display on the front panel lets you search and access your music files. Song title, artist, time and album information are displayed clearly, and the 7-Way Rotary Commander is intuitive and user-friendly. The central dial lets you control 90% of the unit’s functions and features. You can quickly scroll through your MP3, WMA, or AAC files and folders the same as if you’re using an iPod. Just by pressing and holding down the “List†button, folders pop up containing the songs made by the artist you’re listening to. Passenger Control Mode allows your passenger to use the iPod® directly in order to browse and select music.

The included remote lets you control the Pioneer DEHP3000IB CD Receiver even from the backseat! You can scan through radio channels, breeze through the 18 preset FM channels (or even 6 AM channels). The remote also allows you to control the volume, or quickly set the receiver to mute.

The Pioneer DEHP3000IB CD Receiver is the perfect head unit for replacing your factory radio or CD player for less. This is great-quality sound, for a price that’ll fit anyone’s budget!
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Contributed by Ethel Kay Merioles

If you have decided to take the leap of actually purchasing your music online like most people do these days, then you probably decided you should look around a little before comitting to 99¢ per song – am I right so far? Well, some of these online sites which provide you with access to millions of songs and a dirt-cheap price – may be illegal. Completely.
Good News for iPod owners: Apple is slashing the price of its premium DRM-free music tracks offered on iTunes. The iTunes website, which sells the only DRM protected music compatible with the iPod music player, has offered DRM free music tracks for a while now. However, those tracks cost more money than your average iPod only songs.
Gone are the days of free headphones passed out on airplanes. I still have mine—they work just fine for the low-tech applications that I use them for: mainly to tie the two separated ends of my broken desktop lamp together. Any way you hear it, headphones (and their microphone-equipped counterparts, the headset) have come a long way. One of the most impressive technologies to be developed into a consumer goods phenomenon is that of the Noise Canceling earpieces.
Since the advent of the iconic iPod, the undisputed ruler of the portable MP3 player arena, there’s been a storm of all-in-one speaker systems. I don’t much go in for “gimmick” speaker sets. Make mine loud, big, and ugly. But TigerTV host Jacia has found an iPod speaker dock that is downright attractive, even to audiophiles like me.
Apple Inc. is throwing its weight behind the music industry’s efforts to protect the album format by allowing fans to buy complete digital albums without having to pay again for songs they already own. The record industry is keen to maintain the profitable album format, which is under threat as users of Web-based music download stores, such as Apple’s iTunes and Napster Inc., prefer to buy individual songs rather than whole albums.