mitsubishi wireless Mitsubishi Unleashing Wireless HDTV
Mitsubishi and Amimon have partnered to bring the Living Fit line of LCD HDTV and wireless receiver, due out in Japan this fall.

image Review: Denon AVR-5308CI A/V Receiver
At a mere $5500 Denon's AVR-5308CI shares nearly all of the same features found on their $7500 AVP-A1HDCI flagship processor.

View 40 winning homes. Best Home Theater, Family Room and more.
Electronic House Newsletter   View sample
 
Popular Stories
Recent Comments
Peter Smith (08/21, 03:41 PM)
Daekwan (08/21, 03:02 PM)
Paul (08/21, 12:49 PM)
billy d (08/21, 12:19 PM)
johnson (08/21, 12:12 PM)
Recent Slideshow Galleries
Texas Brownstone Are Media Extenders Finally Catching On? 10 Best Games for Your Cell Phone Inside Panasonic’s Concept Home Upgrade Theater Keeps DIYer Busy Blu-ray Basics Nokia N810 Family Home Theater Bipole, Dipole & Direct Audiophile Boosts Sound in Near Perfect Theater LG Serves Up New TVs & Appliances DIYer Brings the Drive-In Home Installers, Designers Collide in Home Theater Home Makeover Samsung LCD Design Challenges
Info and Answers Feature
PlayStation Sport
Are Video Games a Sport?
Will gamers join the likes of Michael Phelps and LeBron James at the Olympics? Professional gamer Jonathan Wendel makes a case for the cyber-athlete.

Themed Home Theaters
View Designing a Death Star Theater
Designing a Death Star Home Theater
Three separate rooms, one starfield, and a life-sized Han Solo are just a few of the things that help two super "Star Wars" fans get their geek on in this theater.

Site Sections
Services
Digital Media Stores
Apple Working with HD Radio for iTunes Tagging
New products and service allows you to mark favorite songs during radio play and purchase them later.
image

Push the Tag button, and later you can preview, purchase, and enjoy music with iTunes and your iPod.

Also Filed in Digital Media Stores

September 07, 2007 | by Rachel Cericola

Just when you thought there wasn’t anything else they could add to the iPod experience. Now HD Radio wants in on the success, so they are teaming up with Apple for a new free service called iTunes Tagging.

Basically when you’re rocking out to HD Radio and your favorite Foghat song comes on, you can just push the Tag button, and your system will mark that song for purchase on iTunes.

The service is a joint effort between Apple and iBiquity Digital, as well as the several broadcasters that need to implement the system on their radio stations.

And (thankfully), it doesn’t just work with Foghat. It’s perfect for all of those songs that you loved but had no clue who performed them. However, you will need a compatible system. Right now, the Polk I-Sonic Entertainment System 2 (shown) and the JBL iHD are the only two units that will have the Tag option.

Both the Polk and JBL products will be available in time for the holidays. Expect other products for the home and car to hit in 2008.



About the Author:
Rachel Cericola - Contributing Writer
Over the past 15 years, Rachel Cericola has covered entertainment, web and technology trends. Check her out at www.rachelcericola.com.


This entry has been viewed 723 times.

Article Topics

Social Bookmark   less


Comments (4) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by blueman  on  09/11/07  at  10:27 PM

The online music service smstunes.com already have this tagging service for most popular US based FM radio stations (no HD), you just need to send a text message with the station frequency, not as easily as pressing a button but still can be useful as you can use it anywhere in US with your mobile, more details here:

http://www.smstunes.com/radio.aspx

Posted by JimboG  on  09/07/07  at  05:42 PM

Color me unimpressed.

Now if this were HD radio reception on the iPod, that would be kinda cool.  Better still would be an HD radio receiver that would record songs you like off the radio so you could play them back at your leisure on your iPod.  I could get into that.

None of this makes me want to race out and buy a table top alarm clock with HD radio for $200+.

Posted by Rachel Cericola  on  09/07/07  at  01:59 PM

I think Apple has very little involvement. I mean, if someone else wants to direct them to iTunes, why would Apple care? Mo’ money for them… I think it’s HD Radio trying to get a bit of the iPod hook.

Posted by PocketRadio  on  09/07/07  at  01:21 PM

ea, it is not the big-deal it is made out to be - consumers have shunned table-top HD radio, so why should they spend $500 for a device that still requires AM-loop and externally-mounted FM-dipole antennas to even have a chance to pick up the fragile digital HD signals. This is far from having Apple actually including it as a part of the new iPod. This is all to late for HD Radio:

http://hdradiofarce.blogspot.com/



Post a Comment

Name:

Email:


View comment guidelines

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please answer the question below:

Type the first letter of the word "stereo":





Learn more about products and solutions from tech companies.
Electronic House magazine's 2008 Best Homes of the Year special.
Electronic House reviews the coolest products of the year.
Get all the information you need to network your entire home.

Stay up-to-date with home electronics. Get your print subscription today.
Weekly email offers tips, info and product news.
Subscribe today!
Get the content that's important to you.
More about RSS.
Electronic House is now available in a digital edition. Learn more.
About us Advertise Magazine Newsletters Digital issues EH Publishing Privacy policy Contact us
 Copyright © 2006 EH Publishing. All rights reserved.
EH Network: CE Pro TecHome Builder ChannelPro ProSoundWeb Church Production Electronic House Expo TecHome Builder Expo Worship Facilities Expo