In the 1960s, my uncle made a good living buying up slightly imperfect Levis and reselling them at a steep discount in poor countries.
That business model is being followed today by iPodMeister. The company, based in New York, takes your used CDs and DVDs, sends them off to poorer countries where people can't afford MP3 players, and gives you a new iPod, iPhone and now iPad in return.
What you get depends on what you give. In exchange for 220 discs, you'll get an 8GB iPod Nano. A 16GB iPhone 3GS goes for 330 discs. And a 16GB iPad with Wi-Fi can be had if you have 600 discs. If you want the top of the line iPad, a 64GB model with Wi-Fi and 3G capability, that will cost you 1,150 discs.
All genres of discs are accepted, with certain limitations. No porn, no scratched discs, no promotional discs, and 20 copies of your garage band's CD are verboten.
The album cover art plus the CD folder must be intact and in good shape. Promotional compilation discs, such as "Macy's Favorite Christmas Songs" are not taken. Blu-ray discs get you double credit, and each disc of a multi-disc collection are counted.
If you're turning in DVDs, you can send only Region 1 or all-region discs.
Shipping of the discs to iPodMeister is free. And if you're worried about losing all that great music, the company will digitize it and return it on a disc, if you're willing to send in even more CDs. For example, that 64GB iPad with Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity will cost you 1,400 discs, if you want the music copied.
Source: 20/03/10
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samedi 20 mars 2010
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