FREE 2-day Shipping: Pioneer's inno is the complete entertainment package. Over any in-dash FM stereo; XM + Napster software for purchasing music online.
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Manufacturer: | Inno3D | |
Compatibility: | Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10 | |
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This page contains information about installing the latest Inno3D driver downloads using the Inno3D Driver Update Tool.
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Inno3D drivers are tiny programs that enable your Inno3D hardware to communicate with your operating system software. Maintaining updated Inno3D software prevents crashes and maximizes hardware and system performance. Using outdated or corrupt Inno3D drivers can cause system errors, crashes, and cause your computer or hardware to fail. Furthermore, installing the wrong Inno3D drivers can make these problems even worse.
Recommendation: If you are inexperienced with updating Inno3D device drivers manually, we highly recommend downloading the Inno3D Driver Utility. This tool will download and update the correct Inno3D driver versions automatically, protecting you against installing the wrong Inno3D drivers.
XM Satellite Radio has announced the settlement of a lawsuit filed by EMI Records in 2006 in response to the company's offering of Pioneer's Inno receiver. The device's digital recording capabilities spawned a host of lawsuits from all the major labels, and XM has been settling them one by one. With EMI dropping its suit, the company now appears to be in the clear.
The focus of the labels' ire is manufactured by Pioneer, but offered to XM subscribers. The key feature, from the record industry's perspective, is its ability to record up to 50 hours of digital content, either at the press of a button or through scheduling. From consumers' and XM's perspective, this is the sort of time-shifting that TiVo offers, letting users catch programs they would have otherwise missed. Form the labels' perspective, these digital copies are an invitation to piracy—even though there was no mechanism for extracting the recordings from the Inno.
At the time these lawsuits were announced, we speculated that there might be something to the recording industry's concerns, as various forms of DRM have been a magnet for hackers. A web search for hacks, however, finds a few links describing modifying the device's FM transmitter capabilities, but then quickly degenerates into various disgruntled listeners describing equally varied XM content as being produced by hacks. Apparently, the 50 hours of recording were a resistible lure, despite the device's convenient USB port.
As with the past Inno settlements, the terms of the latest were not disclosed. Based on past events, it's safe to assume XM will be sending EMI checks in return for offering this feature. Sirius, which offers a similar device, negotiated similar payments before marketing it, and has avoided the court system entirely.