NoteBurner M4P Converter converts any DRM protected music files (such as M4P, WMA, M4B) to unprotected MP3, WAV, WMA formats with Virtual CD-RW drive. It is a protected audio and music converter tool designed for virtually burning DRM protected music or audio files to a special virtual CD-RW drive where you can get plain MP3, WMA or WAV files ready for use on any computers or music devices. This CD burner emulator automates the whole workflow for converting protected music or audio files to normal music files. NoteBurner is only for Windows XP/Vista. If you have a Mac, you may use Tune4Mac which is an equivalent software for Mac OS X
Features
*Preserves high quality
*Use internal burning features of iTunes, Media Player, Real Player, Napster to convert any protected or unprotected music to Virtual CD-RW.
*Converts purchased songs for use with iPod, any other MP3 player, mobile phone or PC
*Preserves ID3 tags for artist, album, title names etc.
*Batch mode for converting or unprotecting large song collections
*Needs 20 seconds for a four minute song
NoteBurner M4P Converter runs under Windows XP/Vista. is a Mac version.
Features
*Preserves high quality
*Use internal burning features of iTunes, Media Player, Real Player, Napster to convert any protected or unprotected music to Virtual CD-RW.
*Converts purchased songs for use with iPod, any other MP3 player, mobile phone or PC
*Preserves ID3 tags for artist, album, title names etc.
*Batch mode for converting or unprotecting large song collections
*Needs 20 seconds for a four minute song
NoteBurner M4P Converter runs under Windows XP/Vista. is a Mac version.
Stephen John Nagrant, Jr., better known as Steve Nagrant, (born June 30, 1988 in Farmington Hills, Michigan) is an American football running back who plays for the Grand Valley State Lakers.
High school career
Nagrant attended Walled Lake Western High School in Walled Lake, MI. His physical running style helped set the school record for most first downs in a season during his senior campaign in 2005. During that season, he led the Warriors to a 7-4 record, rushing for over 100 yards in 8 of the 11 games, including in games against Fordson High School, Walled Lake Northern High School, Northville High School, Plymouth High School, and North Farmington High School in the MHSAA playoffs. He was named All-division 2nd team as a junior, and was named to the All-Oakland County, All-Area, All-Metro North, and All-Conference teams his senior year.
College career
Nagrant joined the Grand Valley State Lakers in 2006. He started the 2007 Spring Game, rushing for a touchdown. He was redshirted for the 2007 season .
High school career
Nagrant attended Walled Lake Western High School in Walled Lake, MI. His physical running style helped set the school record for most first downs in a season during his senior campaign in 2005. During that season, he led the Warriors to a 7-4 record, rushing for over 100 yards in 8 of the 11 games, including in games against Fordson High School, Walled Lake Northern High School, Northville High School, Plymouth High School, and North Farmington High School in the MHSAA playoffs. He was named All-division 2nd team as a junior, and was named to the All-Oakland County, All-Area, All-Metro North, and All-Conference teams his senior year.
College career
Nagrant joined the Grand Valley State Lakers in 2006. He started the 2007 Spring Game, rushing for a touchdown. He was redshirted for the 2007 season .
The Kennesaw State Student Recreation & Wellness Center (abbreviated SRWC, formerly known as the Intramural and Recreation Services) is located in the middle of Kennesaw State University campus adjacent to the campus green.
History
The SRWC opened in August 2005 after a major addition and renovation was completed to the existing athletic basketball gym. The facility is comprised of two different departments, Intramural & Recreation Services a division of the Department of Student Life and the Center for Health Promotion and Wellness a division College of Health and Human Services.
Recreation Center
The majority of the student recreation center facilities are in the new edition to the existing athletic Basketball gym. The new edition includes two 3,500 square foot floors with a strength and conditioning area and a cardiovascular exercise area. The strength and conditioning area has over 10,000Lbs. of free weights and 28 selectorized pieces of equipment. The cardio floor is equipped with over 50 commercial grade pieces. The Wellness Center offers fitness tests using the MicroFit testing system, nutrition counseling, peer education, change for wellness incentive, and an Owl Watchers programs.
Technology
The SRWC has over 25 Plasma displays throughout the building used as Digital signage and a television service through DirecTV. Multi-directional speakers and a gym theater system also installed for participants with service through XM Satellite Radio.
History
The SRWC opened in August 2005 after a major addition and renovation was completed to the existing athletic basketball gym. The facility is comprised of two different departments, Intramural & Recreation Services a division of the Department of Student Life and the Center for Health Promotion and Wellness a division College of Health and Human Services.
Recreation Center
The majority of the student recreation center facilities are in the new edition to the existing athletic Basketball gym. The new edition includes two 3,500 square foot floors with a strength and conditioning area and a cardiovascular exercise area. The strength and conditioning area has over 10,000Lbs. of free weights and 28 selectorized pieces of equipment. The cardio floor is equipped with over 50 commercial grade pieces. The Wellness Center offers fitness tests using the MicroFit testing system, nutrition counseling, peer education, change for wellness incentive, and an Owl Watchers programs.
Technology
The SRWC has over 25 Plasma displays throughout the building used as Digital signage and a television service through DirecTV. Multi-directional speakers and a gym theater system also installed for participants with service through XM Satellite Radio.
Tanner Bronson is a basketball player for the Wisconsin Badgers. He was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on May 27, 1985. Listed at 5'11, 170 pound, Tanner is a senior guard for the Wisconsin Badgers. Bronson is best known for his inspiring story of team manager his freshman year of college into a basketball team standout and fan favorite for the Badgers.
According to ESPN.com, he records career averages of .5 points, .2 assists, .3 rebounds and .2 steals per game in 133 minutes in 67 game appearances. His most prominent appearances came in the 2005-2006 season when injuries hampered the Badgers, and Bronson made a career high in minutes in a Big Ten Tournament game against Indiana where Bronson recorded 12 minutes and 4 points. Bronson also appeared in 1st half minutes in a 2006 NCAA Tournament 1st round game against Arizona. Bronson is currently finishing up his career as the Badgers make an NCAA tournament run in a Sweet 16 appearance against Davidson.
Bronson grew up in Glendale, WI, a suburb of Milwaukee. His father, Wally, is a local club tennis pro, and mother, Jody the head women's tennis coach at Marquette University, but Tanner decided to take a different sports route. He attended Nicolet High School as a 4'9 85 lb. freshman.
He debuted on the varsity basketball team as a 5'2 105 lb. sophomore. Although the smallest on the court at any given time, he attained honorable mention All-Conference honors his junior season and 1st team All-Conference and 1st All-Suburban honors his senior year. The point guard eventually grew to 5'10 and averaged 12 points per game his senior season.
Although recruited by several Division III and Ivy league schools, Bronson decided to attend the University of Wisconsin-Madison and supposedly end his basketball career. Yet, he never gave up his basketball dream, and decided to become a manager for the Badger basketball team his freshman year. Along with his duties of wiping floors, filling water bottles and keeping practice statistics, he got the opportunity to scrimmage in practice with the team because of injuries that resulted in a depleted roster. Bronson wowed players and coaches playing the likes of Kammron Taylor and current New Jersey Net Devin Harris.
At the end of the season, he approached legendary Coach Bo Ryan about the opportunity for a walk-on spot and was awarded one. Bronson continued to impress and after his freshman year earned a full scholarship. Bronson's story became recognized by avid Badger fans and the loudest cheers for the team came at the end of games when Bronson enters. Bronson's inspiring story and reinforcement of the mantra "you don't have to be tall to reach great heights" was noticed by the Associated Press and appeared in several major publications such as the New York Times.
Bronson continues to inspire many nationwide as a senior guard and still receives "Tanner Bronson" chants on a regular basis. Tanner Bronson is a "bro" despite being just a little guy. Coach Bo Ryan has said Tanner is like another assistant coach on the bench.
According to ESPN.com, he records career averages of .5 points, .2 assists, .3 rebounds and .2 steals per game in 133 minutes in 67 game appearances. His most prominent appearances came in the 2005-2006 season when injuries hampered the Badgers, and Bronson made a career high in minutes in a Big Ten Tournament game against Indiana where Bronson recorded 12 minutes and 4 points. Bronson also appeared in 1st half minutes in a 2006 NCAA Tournament 1st round game against Arizona. Bronson is currently finishing up his career as the Badgers make an NCAA tournament run in a Sweet 16 appearance against Davidson.
Bronson grew up in Glendale, WI, a suburb of Milwaukee. His father, Wally, is a local club tennis pro, and mother, Jody the head women's tennis coach at Marquette University, but Tanner decided to take a different sports route. He attended Nicolet High School as a 4'9 85 lb. freshman.
He debuted on the varsity basketball team as a 5'2 105 lb. sophomore. Although the smallest on the court at any given time, he attained honorable mention All-Conference honors his junior season and 1st team All-Conference and 1st All-Suburban honors his senior year. The point guard eventually grew to 5'10 and averaged 12 points per game his senior season.
Although recruited by several Division III and Ivy league schools, Bronson decided to attend the University of Wisconsin-Madison and supposedly end his basketball career. Yet, he never gave up his basketball dream, and decided to become a manager for the Badger basketball team his freshman year. Along with his duties of wiping floors, filling water bottles and keeping practice statistics, he got the opportunity to scrimmage in practice with the team because of injuries that resulted in a depleted roster. Bronson wowed players and coaches playing the likes of Kammron Taylor and current New Jersey Net Devin Harris.
At the end of the season, he approached legendary Coach Bo Ryan about the opportunity for a walk-on spot and was awarded one. Bronson continued to impress and after his freshman year earned a full scholarship. Bronson's story became recognized by avid Badger fans and the loudest cheers for the team came at the end of games when Bronson enters. Bronson's inspiring story and reinforcement of the mantra "you don't have to be tall to reach great heights" was noticed by the Associated Press and appeared in several major publications such as the New York Times.
Bronson continues to inspire many nationwide as a senior guard and still receives "Tanner Bronson" chants on a regular basis. Tanner Bronson is a "bro" despite being just a little guy. Coach Bo Ryan has said Tanner is like another assistant coach on the bench.