For a fee, iPods get their fill.The rising popularity of Apple's iPod has created a new kind of entrepreneur: the professional iPod loader. For $1 to $1.49 a CD, this person will take on the time-consuming task of loading an entire music collection onto an iPod or other digital music player Hardware or software that plays audio files encoded in MP3, AAC, WMA or other audio formats. There are several software-based music players that play audio files in a desktop or laptop computer, including iTunes, RealPlayer and Windows Media Player. , often providing a backup copy A disk, tape or other machine readable copy of a data or program file. Making backup copies is a discipline most computer users learn the hard way-- after months of work is lost. See backup and LAN free backup. as well. "It's a booming aftermarket of the iPod economy," says Bill Palmer, 27, who has created a nationwide network of iPod loaders called Loadpod. Converting enough CDs to fill a 40-gigabyte iPod can take 60 to 100 hours, depending on the computer's speed. "The prospect of spending all this time was daunting daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin ," says Nell Eckersly of Brooklyn, N.Y., who received an iPod for Christmas and was faced with loading her 400-CD collection. Hearing such frustration has inspired students, computer technicians, and even doctors to set up shop. An iPod loader can earn several hundred dollars for converting a large collection, but hour by hour the money is modest--from $6 to $12 an hour. Jay Parkinson, a 28-year-old pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. resident at a New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of hospital, loads iPods in his spare time. "I'm deeply in debt because of medical education," he says. "Why not just get paid to be sitting at home?" |
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