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| | Digital audio player - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Personal Jukebox (PJB-100), manufactured under license by HanGo Electronics, had 4.8GB of storage space, which held about 1200 songs (or 100 CDs, hence the name PJB-100), and was the beginning of what would be called the jukebox segment of digital audio players. |
 | | Generally speaking, digital audio players are portable, employing internal or replaceable batteries and headphones, although users often connect players to car and home stereos. |
 | | While today's digital audio players generally do not support MOD files directly, progress is being made on that front with projects such as the TRAXMOD [3] digital audio player. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Digital_audio_player (1569 words) |
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