Not a solution to your problem but during my Nokia days there used to be a application on Nokia website called 'nokia transfer' or something similar. I would use that and then import to iPhoto...sorry cannot give you a clue to your problem itself.

First of all, as a late entrant into the market, I must commend Nokia for creating a reasonable competition to other old-time online music stores. They still have lots of catching up to do with Apple iTunes Store. But the Nokia Music Store is certainly no weak competition.


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But perhaps the inclusion of Asian music is due to the presence of the Nokia Music Store in Singapore. Apple iTunes Store, sadly, was not available in Singapore until the official availability of iPhone here, and then, it was only to offer iPhone apps. I.e., the iTunes Store here primarily sold apps, not music.

However, because the music from Nokia Music Store is DRM protected, there are some restrictions with where you can transfer your music. For the Comes with Music service, you can transfer to one PC and one phone. Sadly, you cannot burn to CD.

If you buy music from the Nokia Music Store (not using the Comes with Music service), you are allowed to burn the music to CD. That would mean you can at least play the music elsewhere by taking the CD around, or even ripping the CD back to a computer.

Last week Nokia rolled out Nokia Music for the Lumia 710 and Lumia 900 devices here in the US. Nokia Music was a Lumia exclusive service released with the Lumia 800 outside the US, but it took almost a year to get it up and running here. I have been using it on both my Nokia Lumia 900 and Nokia N9 MeeGo device (yes, it runs on the N9 here in the US now too) since the release and have removed Spotify from both of these devices as this new FREE meets MY mobile music listening needs. Let's take an in-depth look at Nokia Music on the Lumia 900 and if you have a Lumia 900 or 710 I highly recommend you give it a try, it won't cost you anything but your time.

I do not have a large personal music collection and have a rather eclectic taste in music where I listen to classic rock, Christian, classical, jazz, and country. It really depends on what I am doing and what kind of mood I am in. I have some favorite artists, but am open to listening to new artists as well so I prefer the "radio" model of listening where lots of different content is provided on a random basis to my devices. Thus, I am a perfect candidate for something like Nokia Music and I understand that some people prefer to listen to their own playlists and specific artists. There are lots of choices for all of us and so far I think Nokia Music was made just for people like me.

Another major benefit of the Nokia Music service and Mix Radio is the ability to download music for listening to without a connection. Nokia Music supports offline download of music for a period of time from three to four hours of playback (I am trying to find out an official length allowed by the service). This is great for flights or other times when you do not have an active connection. If you need more music than this for offline usage then you can always switch to listening to any of your own music stored on your device or enjoy music you purchased through the Nokia Store.

While the real strength of discovery and exploration of music is found in Nokia Mix Radio, some people want to listen to their own music. Nokia brings in access to music stored on your device so you can use Nokia Music to select and play songs without having to use the Music utility found in Windows Phone. On the Nokia N9, your own music is found in the Music app while the Music Store app is where you go to listen to "radio" channels and purchase music.

When you tap My Music from within Nokia Music you will see all of the music stored on your device assembled in pages for artists, albums, songs, genres, and playlists. I cannot find any way to create a playlist on my Lumia 900 and the playlists screen instructs me to connect to a PC for playlists. This module functions much like the Windows Phone Music utility with controls for play, pause, forward, backward, shuffle, and repeat. Music controls can be accessed from above the lock screen as well. Unlike the current Windows Phone utility, you can also share what you are listening to with your social network (Windows Live, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook), via email, or via SMS. I like this ability to share with my social networks and hope Microsoft adds that to Windows Phone, something even the Zune HD has in place.

I realize this is the first release here in the US and the service is free, but I do have a couple of features I would like to see added. I like that my Zune Pass music service shows the album art of the last artist I was listening to on my Live Tile as it adds a bit of personalization and character to my Start screen. I want Nokia to add this type of Live Tile functionality as well since right now all I see is a musical note.

Ewan continues his multipart look at the new Nokia X6 Comes with Music with, appropriately, a look at its music playing prowess - and sometimes the lack of it. See also part 1 of this review, looking at the X6's externals.

"Just wanted to confirm that Comes With Music means that when you buy a Nokia Comes With Music device like the Nokia 5310, you get unlimited access to the millions of tracks in the Nokia Music catalogue and, once downloaded, they are yours to keep. Once you have bought a Nokia Comes With Music device, there is no per track cost for these unlimited downloads and no maximum of 120 tracks per year as referenced in your blog."


As Nokia rolls out its Comes With Music service in Britain, stateside music types have been paying close attention, because we too could eventually be offered a cellphone that comes with the right to download music from a large catalog and keep it even if we close our account.

Consumers can stream music from a suite of over 150 exclusive playlists that are curated and kept up to date by an expert team of US based musicologists. The playlists span a wide spectrum of musical genres from underground Detroit house tracks to New York Philharmonic favorites. Nokia Music also offers playlists created by global artists such as Lana Del Rey, Lady Gaga and Rihanna.

Nokia on Wednesday continued its bid to unseat the Apple iPhone as the music-centric device of choice with the addition of three new handhelds to its roster. The trio of music-centric phones, the Nokia 5730 XpressMusic, Nokia 5330 XpressMusic and the Nokia 5030, aim to bring 'Comes With Music' and the Nokia Music Store to new geographies.








Nokia's music store is currently available in 15 markets on three continents. Similar to Apple's iTunes, it lets users browse and buy music, get recommendations and search for artists, songs or albums directly from their phones. Comes With Music is a subscription-based service that gives users unlimited downloads for the Nokia Music Store for a year or 18 months. Users keep the tracks when their subscription expires. Comes With Music is currently available in the U.K. and Singapore and will launch in the U.S. sometimes this year. Two of the new devices, the 5730 XpressMusic and 5330 XpressMusic will be Comes With Music-compatible in available markets, while the Nokia 5030 (shown) is a portable FM radio/mobile phone combo.

First up is Nokia's first music-centric device to offer a full QWERTY keyboard, which the Finnish device-maker said is ideal for quick messaging. The device centers around the Homescreen for XpressMusic, which provides access and dynamic information on music, people, games, e-mail and calendar. The Homescreen features an updated contacts bar with up to 20 friends and family members and provides direct access to music, N-Gage and other applications like Facebook, Ovi Contacts, Maps, messaging and more. Using Ovi Contacts, people can see which friends are online, chat and view what music they are listening to.

The 5730 XpressMusic also features a Music shortcut for quick access to the music stored on the device, as well as to the Nokia Music Store, where users can find information on artists, music and over-the-air downloads directly on the device.


It also offers dedicated gaming keys, making it a true N-Gage gadget, Nokia said. Direct access to the N-Gage Arena community and the preloaded N-Gage games let users invite, connect, compete and check high scores with online friends.

Nokia is calling the 5330 XpressMusic "edgy" with its top-sliced design and illumination effects. That handheld, Nokia said, is ideal for music and keeping in touch with social networks.


The 5330 XpressMusic offers music-centric touch keys on the side of the display for instant access to tunes. It also features a standard 3.5mm headphone jack for crystal-clear sound. The device offers enough battery life for more than 26 hours of playback time.

KaiOS has a built-in music player that can play tracks from the phone memory or the SD card. It automatically groups the tracks by albums or artists based on the ID3 tags and is generally convenient to use. When using Bluetooth headphones, you can control playback with the headphone buttons. The playback continues when you close the phone, too.

In the end, I opted in for using the wonderful gPodder app on my desktop computer for downloading podcast episodes and syncing them to the phone as regular audio files. I then use the stock music player for listening.

It did impress me by playing the MP3 on the phone. I expected it to completely choke on a file this big. Trying to fast forward through a song is useless, as it works in 6 second increments per button push. They need to adopt the positional scroll bar slider of the iPod. It looks like it can store and play the entire MP3, but the MP3 playing application does not know how to fast forward / display time past 34 minutes and 5 seconds. Trying to rewind after 34:05 stops MP3 playback. This is what I expected, as it took iPod forever to properly implement large MP3 support. Keep your music files to a reasonable size and you will be fine. It will be a problem for audio-books. 0852c4b9a8

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