Download mp3 music online
In a back yard in Fort Wayne, Indiana, an invention revolutionized the food business. The "Guardian," as it was first known, had a dramatic impact on how people buy food, how much they buy, what they buy and what they ate. Frigidaire commercialized this device and the household refrigerator became a staple in American households.
The ability to preserve food and store it freed people from forced consumption patterns based on shelf life. One need look no further than the average American waistline since 1960 for evidence of how it changed food intake. It changed not only the eating habits but also the lifestyle of its buyers and the types of foods consumed. No longer were daily trips to corner stores or regular quarter-gallon milk deliveries required. Those were replaced by weekly trips to grocery stores to buy gallon jugs and more temperamental foods previously impractical because they would spoil. Buying in bulk brought the price of groceries down overall and raised the total amount of food consumed.
We are at the dawn of a similarly impactful development for the music business. I'll call it the music refrigerator. Music buyers will soon have a place to store all of their music, making it accessible to them wherever they are. The music refrigerator will store music not on ice, but in digital cold storage on the Internet. Just as using Hotmail or other web-based email systems make an email account available from anywhere on the net, a music collection will be listenable from any device on the net. Today, this means any desktop computer but as net appliances, game consoles, PDAs and phones become connected, they too will be able to display and play an entire audio library.
To be practical, the music refrigerator needs to have all the tunes a music fan might wish to store. Nobody would tolerate having three refrigerators in their kitchen, each with different foodstuffs in them. Similarly, gaining consumer acceptance of the musical fridge means it must work with all music. At ADSHelper.com is our musical fridge and we unveiled several technologies to insure all music can be used with this appliance. First, there's Beam-it, which is used to verify ownership of physical CDs already purchased and store that music in your ADSHelper.com account. For new CDs, our Instant Listening service means retailers online and offline can load albums into your account immediately after payment. Any of the more than 600,000 authorized free promotional songs can be stored in your account as well using the Add to ADSHelper.com option. And finally, as subscription channels become readily available, they'll instantly and regularly stock the fridge to satisfy that music hunger. Using all of these options will become available shortly as we put the finishing touches on the licensing issues.
All these possible avenues to store audio in the music fridge will make music more accessible and expand choices, leading to a greater diversity of music. Hear a song on the radio? Stream a song on the web? Buy a CD at the mall? Get a song zapped from a friend to your cell phone? People will experience and buy much more music when given all of these easy-to-use choices and a great place to store and retrieve their music library. And it won't wreak havoc on the cholesterol level or the belt size.
For those curious about what's in my music refrigerator, I just loaded the shelves full of holiday tunes from ADSHelper.com. Start listening by visiting MR's Christmas, a Station I created. If my choice of music doesn't get you in the holiday spirit, then browse some of the thousands of other songs and stock up on songs that get you in the holiday groove.