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  1. If you were a child growing up in the late 90s or early 2000s, odds are you remember the most entertaining and hilariously nonsensical way of listening to music: HitClips.

  2. 4 wrz 2024 · If you’re always looping the “best bit” of your favorite songs, you probably loved HitClips back in the day. This early 2000s music player aimed at the “tween” demographic played 60-second remixes of popular tracks that kids were encouraged to collect and display on keychains.

  3. First introduced in 2000, HitClips were a strange amalgam that functioned as both a toy and as portable audio equipment. Though the crackling mono sound was hardly an audiophile’s dream, the...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HitClipsHitClips - Wikipedia

    HitClips is a digital audio player created by Tiger Electronics that plays low-fidelity mono one-minute clips of usually teen pop hits from exchangeable cartridges. [1] It first launched in August 2000 [2] with 60-second microchip songs featuring Britney Spears, NSYNC, and Sugar Ray.

  5. HitClips were a digital audio format for children, introduced by Tiger Electronics in 1999. The players came in a variety of styles, such as miniature boomboxes with a built in speaker, or versions that looked like an MP3 player and came with a earphone.

  6. 6 lut 2018 · A two-part compilation of sounds that might be familiar to those who grew up in the 2000s, compiled by Youtube user Artisax. The sounds are: Part 1. - Walt Disney Pictures Logo (1985-2006) - Windows XP Startup Sound. - Nintendo DS Startup Animation.

  7. 7 mar 2018 · The almost 20-year-old digital audio player allowed you to take a full minute of ultra-low-fi mono music from your favorite artists like Britney Spears, 'N Sync, Backstreet Boys, and Smash Mouth anywhere you went. And while Hit Clips seem just as nonsensical today as they did back in 2000, they are often overlooked and under-appreciated as the ...

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