To actually hook up your Creative Zen MP3 player to your computer, you’ll need the included USB cable, which should connect as shown in this spiffo Creative illustration: Those can play on the Creative Zen too, fortunately. If you’ve purchased your music, it’ll be in WMA DRM, that is, a version of the WMA format that includes digital rights management (so you can’t just email a copy of the audio file to your pals once you’ve purchased and downloaded it). It’s quite likely that your existing audio files are in one of these formats, probably WMA if you’ve been using Windows Media Player to rip your CDs. The Zen player can handle three primary types of audio files too, the common MP3 format, WMA format and the more unusual WAV format. Neither really makes much sense to me, but both of these programs have the key essential capability that you need: to open up your existing audio files and copy them or sync them with your Creative Zen player. According to Creative Labs, you should either be using the Creative Media Explorer if you are new to MP3 and WMA ripping and want to build up a library or prefer to manage your Zen player as a removable disk drive, or using the Creative MediaSource Player/Organizer if you “frequently need to playback or organize music in your computer”.
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