MP3 player
Moderator: Thanas
MP3 player
Yet another electronics question for the board...
My sister is looking for a MP3 player. She wants something fairly small, with a very large amount of storage. So... what are her options?
My sister is looking for a MP3 player. She wants something fairly small, with a very large amount of storage. So... what are her options?
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Straight out -- if she has a Mac, an iPod is easily the best option. Easy to use controls, fast uploading, and massive storage make it one of the best players on the market. Unfortunately, there's no software for connecting it to a Wintel machine (yet), and you need a Firewire port.
There are several tradeoffs that have to be made when choosing a player -- do you want stability, large storage, or small size? You can usually only get two of those three in any package.
If having unskippable playback is important, a Compact Flash based player is a good idea -- the Rio S50 series, for instance. The media is relatively inexpensive compared to the proprietary media used by the first generation of players and available from a variety of manufacturers ($50 for 128 MB, for instance). CF-based players have the most expensive storage out of the current options despite this, though, and memory usually tops out at 512 MB. These also tend to be the smallest players in terms of size and weight.
If versatility is important, an MP3-CD player is the best way to go -- you can easily write new songs to a CD-R or CD-RW and take it with you, and carry some 700 MB per disc. iRiver, I think, makes the best of these (the iRiver SlimX 350, for instance). While rather small for a CD player, such units still have to fit a CD and so may be too bulky in terms of size. They're pretty light, though. These also tend to skip if you are very active (say, going out jogging or exercising). An advantage of these is that you can write the media with any software you wish instead of being forced to use the one provided with the unit.
A hard drive based unit gives the most storage, but is almost never expandable and tend to be large compared to Flash based units (about the size of a walkman, and noticeably heavier). They have less of a tendency to skip compared to the CD units, but still do. Of these, the Creative Zen is probably the least cumbersome of the units available for the PC. I've also heard good things about the Toshiba Mobilphile, but it apparently requires a laptop to transfer files (its hard drive plugs into a PC card slot). The iPod, by the way, falls into this category.
I use a Rio 800 Limited Edition. Storage is tiny compared to many recent players (128 MB vs. storage in the GB range), upload is limited to Slow USB 2.0 (what used to be called USB 1.2, not the "real" USB 2.0) speeds, and memory expansion is limited to proprietary packs that cost around $2/MB (I paid $68 for a 32 MB expansion pack). I wouldn't recommend this unit to anyone unless you can get it for cheap, and maybe not even then.
There are several tradeoffs that have to be made when choosing a player -- do you want stability, large storage, or small size? You can usually only get two of those three in any package.
If having unskippable playback is important, a Compact Flash based player is a good idea -- the Rio S50 series, for instance. The media is relatively inexpensive compared to the proprietary media used by the first generation of players and available from a variety of manufacturers ($50 for 128 MB, for instance). CF-based players have the most expensive storage out of the current options despite this, though, and memory usually tops out at 512 MB. These also tend to be the smallest players in terms of size and weight.
If versatility is important, an MP3-CD player is the best way to go -- you can easily write new songs to a CD-R or CD-RW and take it with you, and carry some 700 MB per disc. iRiver, I think, makes the best of these (the iRiver SlimX 350, for instance). While rather small for a CD player, such units still have to fit a CD and so may be too bulky in terms of size. They're pretty light, though. These also tend to skip if you are very active (say, going out jogging or exercising). An advantage of these is that you can write the media with any software you wish instead of being forced to use the one provided with the unit.
A hard drive based unit gives the most storage, but is almost never expandable and tend to be large compared to Flash based units (about the size of a walkman, and noticeably heavier). They have less of a tendency to skip compared to the CD units, but still do. Of these, the Creative Zen is probably the least cumbersome of the units available for the PC. I've also heard good things about the Toshiba Mobilphile, but it apparently requires a laptop to transfer files (its hard drive plugs into a PC card slot). The iPod, by the way, falls into this category.
I use a Rio 800 Limited Edition. Storage is tiny compared to many recent players (128 MB vs. storage in the GB range), upload is limited to Slow USB 2.0 (what used to be called USB 1.2, not the "real" USB 2.0) speeds, and memory expansion is limited to proprietary packs that cost around $2/MB (I paid $68 for a 32 MB expansion pack). I wouldn't recommend this unit to anyone unless you can get it for cheap, and maybe not even then.
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*ahem*
Text says Mac & PC so theres software for both.
No firewire needed
At the bottom theres also a System Requirements list which has PC requirements. iPods work on PCs now, dont listen to Datana.
Text says Mac & PC so theres software for both.
No firewire needed
At the bottom theres also a System Requirements list which has PC requirements. iPods work on PCs now, dont listen to Datana.
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Looks like I was mistaken then (MusicMatch Jukebox has iPod support, and there's a USB 2.0 connector for PC use now); you have my concession. In that case, go for the iPod -- nearly all of the other options aren't nearly as well balanced.
(UPDATE -- Note to self: get up to date and RTFA on something the next time I go running off at the mouth.)
(UPDATE -- Note to self: get up to date and RTFA on something the next time I go running off at the mouth.)
Last edited by Datana on 2003-07-02 03:33am, edited 1 time in total.
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Who the hell needs 30GB on an MP3 player?
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Me.Pu-239 wrote:Who the hell needs 30GB on an MP3 player?
Though 30GB would take me like a week to listen to.
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My vote goes to this one. The iRiver SlimX 400.
If you're after a player like the iPod which uses fixed memory then I don't think this one would be for you. Personally I just fill an 800mB CD-RW disc and go. *shrug*
I bought one of these a couple of months ago, but from http://www.mp3players.co.uk for £170. Great value, amazing functionality, and it looks damn good too if you select the "red wine" colour option.
If you're after a player like the iPod which uses fixed memory then I don't think this one would be for you. Personally I just fill an 800mB CD-RW disc and go. *shrug*
I bought one of these a couple of months ago, but from http://www.mp3players.co.uk for £170. Great value, amazing functionality, and it looks damn good too if you select the "red wine" colour option.
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Bah, if I wanted a PDA that plays MP3s, I'd just as soon get the PDA and be done with it.kojikun wrote:they can act as backup HDs as well, PU. and the ipod can act as a small pda.
Wait . . . I already have a PDA that'll play MP3s using a CF card. Sure it's mono radio quality but muwahahaha!
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One of the conditions mentioned for the unit, however, is that it has to be small -- MP3-CD players tend to be the largest physically of the units (I also have an iRiver iMP-100, their first model, and have used the 350-SlimX). HD and Flash based units are much smaller (usually from the size of a clip-on radio to Walkman sized). Still, it's easier to carry a few extra CDs than to have to reload at a computer, but this in itself might be cumbersome.
Something else to consider is the onboard software -- the interface for going through songs varies, and some units don't display ID3 tag information (Philips' mini-CD based MP3 player, for instance). Fixed memory based units also require specific software to load and erase songs, and some of it is poorly written (*cough* Rio Audio Manager *cough*).
Something else to consider is the onboard software -- the interface for going through songs varies, and some units don't display ID3 tag information (Philips' mini-CD based MP3 player, for instance). Fixed memory based units also require specific software to load and erase songs, and some of it is poorly written (*cough* Rio Audio Manager *cough*).
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I've never seen the IMP-100 or IMP-350 except on the web, so I don't know how big they are. The IMP-400 fits perfectly in my pockets though.Datana wrote:One of the conditions mentioned for the unit, however, is that it has to be small -- MP3-CD players tend to be the largest physically of the units (I also have an iRiver iMP-100, their first model, and have used the 350-SlimX).
Yeah, I've had that problem with alot of players before, but when it comes to firmware I'll have to vouch for the SlimX-400 again. The firmware is simple to update and it has so many features that it blew me away, the ability to show which ID3 tags (v1 and v2) you wish to see and in which order (ie. title-artist-album or artist-album-title or any combination thereof). The thing is just sweet. Can even play games on it.Datana wrote:Something else to consider is the onboard software -- the interface for going through songs varies, and some units don't display ID3 tag information (Philips' mini-CD based MP3 player, for instance). Fixed memory based units also require specific software to load and erase songs, and some of it is poorly written (*cough* Rio Audio Manager *cough*).