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CD MAP Payout

In late February, many California music fans discovered in their mail a one-page form letter from the state's attorney general, Bill Lockyer, announcing that he was "pleased to enclose payment for your claim in the settlement of the Compact Disc Minimum Advertised Price Antitrust Litigation." Attached to the bottom of the form letter was a tear-off check made out to the aggrieved music fan from "CD MAP Antitrust Litigation" in Faribault, MN.

CD Radio Announces Agreement with Alpine Electronics

Last week, satellite-to-car radio broadcaster CD">http://www.cdradio.com/">CD Radio announced an agreement with mobile electronics manufacturer Alpine">http://www.alpine1.com/">Alpine Electronics for the design and development of satellite radio receivers. Under the terms of the agreement, Alpine says it will design and develop three-band (AM/FM/CD Radio) audio receivers for installation by car manufacturers. The company also plans to design and develop satellite radio receivers for sale directly to consumers in the electronics aftermarket.

CD Recorder's Dirty Little Secret

The dirty little secret about consumer CD recorders has recently been getting out: In order to record on one of the new "inexpensive" consumer CD machines from such manufacturers as Pioneer or Philips, you have to purchase special "consumer audio" CD-Rs that can cost three to four times as much as the same CD-R formatted for use with a professional or computer-based CD recorder.

CD Recorders Getting Cheaper, More Plentiful

CD audio recorders are becoming affordable and more available. Philips&#039">http://www.philips.com/">Philips' CDR880 (reviewed by Wes Phillips in the current issue of Stereophile) will be in dealers' showrooms soon at a suggested retail price of $649. Pioneerhttp://pioneerelectronics.com/">Pioneer; will also have an inexpensive recorder on the market---the PD-R555RW, which will reportedly sell for $599. These two---and others that will no doubt follow---are welcome relief from the four-figure machines that have dominated the recordable audio CD niche.

CD Recorders Hot Commodity This Season

People love to make their own compilation recordings. That fact helped make the cassette deck the most successful audio format of all time, and it is driving sales of CD recorders, a product category new to most consumers. As predictedhttp://www.stereophile.com/news/10533/">predicted; last summer, CD recorders have become one of the hottest niches in consumer audio, exceeding MiniDisc machines in total sales dollars. Sales are brisk despite the fact that CD recorders are among the priciest components on the market, ranging from $500 to $600. MiniDisc recorders for home use are priced at about $250 and up.

CD Recorders, DVD Changers Hot Items for Fall

Electronics dealers may have a great autumn if they load up on dual-well CD recorders and DVD carousel changers, two of the hottest audio fashion items. Major manufacturers like Kenwoodhttp://www.kenwood.com/">Kenwood;, Onkyohttp://www.onkyo.co.jp/">Onkyo;, Denon,http://www.denon.com/">Denon,;, and Harman/Kardonhttp://www.harman.com/">Harman/Kardon; have all announced plans to deliver recorders and DVD changers by October, in time for the holiday season.

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