MP3 | player | Most Valuable Player | Gary Player | DVD player | Windows Media Player | Player (game) | Player Manager | John Higgins (snooker player) | Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year | CD player | MP3.com | mp3 | Player character | Player | Phil Taylor (darts player) | NCAA Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player | Stephen Jones (rugby player) | player character | NAIA Basketball Tournament Most Valuable Player | Mark Williams (snooker player) | World Series Most Valuable Player Award | Player's Handbook | Neil Smith (football player) | most valuable player | Kenny Rogers (baseball player) | John Bentley (rugby player) | James King (New Zealand rugby union player) | FIFA World Player of the Year | David Palmer (squash player) |
Ccoms, an abbreviation for "chat commands", is any program that employs text-based commands typed into an AOL chat room to control a third-party program, usually an mp3 player or password cracker.
According to PTE Ray Johnson, one of the two men with Kovco at the time of the shooting, "Dreams" by The Cranberries was playing on an mp3 player and Kovco stood at his bunk bed typing on his laptop while the men laughed and mimicked the lead singer Dolores O'Riordan.
RioPort's cloud based music service powered e-tailer websites such as MTV, Hewlett Packard, Virgin Music, Yahoo and supported MP3 Player consumer electronics devices such as from Samsung, Rio MP3 Player, Sanyo, and the first music phone from Nokia.
In 2001, Apple Inc.'s iTunes service was introduced and the iPod, a consumer-friendly MP3 player, was released later that year.
William S. "Bill" Kincaid (born March 10, 1956) is an American computer engineer and entrepreneur notable for creating the MP3 player SoundJam MP with Jeff Robbin that was eventually bought by Apple and renamed iTunes.
David Pogue in a review of the Samsung Z5 MP3 player articulated the Apple/iPod dominant design in the NY Times March 9, 2006.
Other examples of excorporation seen today are Apple Computer’s IPod MP3 Player, and personal cellular phones.
He used the signal as a 2.7-kW personal MP3 player, broadcasting to central and eastern Arizona.
It was also played by Karl Pilkington on his phone while riding a camel across the desert and on his MP3 player when he is buried alive in Russia on an episode of An Idiot Abroad.
Prizes could be rewarded for the best picture/video and text—these are usually small, non-cash prizes such as an ITV Play T-shirt, a Slinky, a pen, or sometimes an electronic item such as an MP3 Player.
It is also possible to download a tourist guide of London onto an MP3 player or use mobile phone-based services.