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CD Walkman logo used from 1997 until 2000. Later Sony models bear the Walkman logo. Walkman is a Sony exclusive naming. Discman D-145 (1995) CD Walkman D-E330 (2002), with Walkman logo. Discman (Japanese: ディスクマン, Hepburn: Dishikuman) was a brand name used by Sony for their portable CD players. The first Discman, the Sony D-50 or D-5 ...
From 1997, Sony's Discman range of portable compact disc (CD) players started to rebrand as CD Walkman. [46] In 2000, the Walkman brand (the entire range) was unified, and a new small icon, "W.", was made for the branding. [45] From 2012, Walkman was also the name of the music player software on Sony Xperia. It has since been rebranded to Music.
From groundbreaking first issues to iconic covers that captured key turning points in history, some of these historical magazines have soared in value among vintage collectors and history buffs ...
Newsweek chose the Sony MMCD player as a pilot platform for Newsweek InterActive, a quarterly CD-ROM magazine initially published in March 1993. [14] [15] The magazine was later released on compact disks for IBM PC compatible computers. No more than "a few thousand of units" of the MMCD version had reportedly shipped by 1995. [16]
It was the first Walkman digital music player to not require SonicStage software - allowing simple drag and drop [38] - but it has been shorn of the ability to play back ATRAC and AAC music files. The Auto-Transfer option allowed this Walkman to search for all the MP3 files on the PC and then copy these files directly to the Walkman.
See all of the most notable magazine covers of 2015: More from AOL.com: 11 most buzzworthy music videos of 2015 Notable deaths: The stars we lost in 2015 The biggest celebrity scandals of 2015.
It includes any type of magazine and single special editions. Groupings are based on over 3 million newsstands copies and distribution. Considered "The Greatest Magazine Ever Published" by David Plotz , Life magazine figures sold the most amount for decades, with a weekly circulation of 4 million copies and over 10 million readers in their ...
CLOAD was a cassette and disk magazine for the TRS-80 which started in 1978. [4] The magazine ran monthly and provided tapes by subscription. [5] The magazine was named after the command to load a tape into the TRS-80. [5] Compute!'s Gazette, originally announced as The Commodore Gazette, was a spinoff of Compute! for the Commodore 64. [6]