Thanks all for your great suggestions.
I have taken the easy option at this stage and dusted down an old lap top
and have taken all files well most off it.
Then using a 4G SD card have started coping my music across 
This is taking some time as the Dell Latitude only has USB1 connections but
that's ok.
I did not realise HD was so small as already telling me is full, that's
where I need further assistance please.
I'm a bit thick when it comes to this so here goes 
Local disc (c) when clicking on properties is roughly telling me it is 20G.
Is this the whole size of the lap top including programmes or will I free up
lots of space by deleting programmes not assocatied with music.
I from memory thought it was 40G but may well have been wrong.
If not what is best?
Buy additional memory for the machine, will this be possible?
External hard drive will this be a problem as only USB1?
Once again thanks all for your support 
Regards 
Colin 
  

-----Original Message-----
From: pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org]
On Behalf Of Christopher Chaltain
Sent: 05 January 2011 17:07
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Accessable Hard Drive for Hi Fi


I can think of a few options. One would be to use an FM transmitter. You 
could attach an FM transmitter to your PC and then broadcast the music 
from your PC and pick it up on your stereo, assuming you have a FM 
receiver as part of your stereo. I don't have one myself, but I'm sure 
others can chime in with more details, opinions and information.

You can also use a few different technologies to broadcast music from 
your PC over wifi or bluetooth to a receiver that you could then attach 
to your stereo. Apple TV and Airport Express would be two such examples, 
and others can speak to them with much greater detail than I can.

A third option is to go with an accessible portable media player with 
enough storage and then attaching it to your stereo system. Even if your 
stereo system doesn't have a lot of connectors, you should be able to 
find connectors that run from your MP3 player into the auxiliary  input 
of your stereo receiver. Note that you'd still have to have this level 
of connection if you were using a wifi or bluetooth receiver. You could 
avoid this with the FM transmitter though. This is the route I went. Not 
because it was superior to any of the other methods, but rather it just 
fit my needs.

With this method, I have a portable MP3 player with most of my music. I 
can use this when traveling, exercising, sitting in the waiting room or 
whatever. I can also attach it to the stereo in my living room, the 
powered external speakers in my bedroom or the audio input jack of my 
wife's car. For MP3 players, you have a few different options. You can 
go with an off the shelf MP3 player that will run Rockbox. This would be 
the cheapest route. You could go with an iPod. Finally, you could go 
with an MP3 player tailored specifically for the blind, such as the 
Booksense. Each have their relative strenghts.

That's my $0.02.

--

Christopher
chalt...@gmail.com


On 1/4/2011 2:43 PM, Colin Phelan wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I wonder if you can assist.
> For use whilst on the move I rip all my music directly to MP3. I still 
> use a traditional hi fi for listening at home I would like for a few 
> reasons to pack away the c d 's and use something I can connect to my 
> hi fi to listen to music at home. I am using a basic separates system 
> that includes a Cyrus amplifyer with little or no fancy connections.
> I do not need an ipod for listening on the move otherwise I may go down
that
> route.
> Is there some sort of hard drive I could use that is accessible and I can
> just copy all the MP3's to.
> Yes when it comes to hi fi I am about 15 years out of date but hey the
Cirus
> amp used to be leading edge and it still works!
> Thanks for your assistance
> Colin
>
>
>
>
>
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