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#1
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There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that
USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) Any recommendations? Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Seamless WMA support also opens up the broadest options in terms of what music to get, and where. Other features to pay attention to are intuitive user interface, easy fit into pocket, and upgradability of firmware/encoding/compression. Wirless file transfer only for forward-looking technophiles. Thanks for your thoughts. |
#2
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Dubious Dude writes:
There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) Today, I wouldn't buy anything with USB 1.x only. 2.0 is so much faster. Getting your music on the player will be much less time consuming. Given the 2.0 has been out for so long, I think you may be hard pressed to find anything with 1.x? Any recommendations? Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Seamless WMA support also opens up the broadest options in terms of what music to get, and where. Other features to pay attention to are intuitive user interface, easy fit into pocket, and upgradability of firmware/encoding/compression. Wirless file transfer only for forward-looking technophiles. The right pick depends on your application. What are you looking to do with this portable music player, primarily? What's your preferred on-computer media player if any? What format is most of your library in? -- /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | Todd H \ / | http://www.toddh.net/ X Promoting good netiquette | / \ http://www.toddh.net/netiquette/ | http://myspace.com/bmiawmb |
#4
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Todd H. wrote:
Dubious Dude writes: There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) Today, I wouldn't buy anything with USB 1.x only. 2.0 is so much faster. Getting your music on the player will be much less time consuming. Given the 2.0 has been out for so long, I think you may be hard pressed to find anything with 1.x? The person for whom I getting the music player has an older laptop with only "USB" (no 2.0 at the end, so I am assuming it is USB 1.x). Any recommendations? Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Seamless WMA support also opens up the broadest options in terms of what music to get, and where. Other features to pay attention to are intuitive user interface, easy fit into pocket, and upgradability of firmware/encoding/compression. Wirless file transfer only for forward-looking technophiles. The right pick depends on your application. What are you looking to do with this portable music player, primarily? What's your preferred on-computer media player if any? What format is most of your library in? I suspect that the person will use the player while walking. Maybe jogging. Neither that person or I use on-computer media players regularly. |
#5
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Todd H. wrote:
(Todd H.) writes: Dubious Dude writes: There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) Today, I wouldn't buy anything with USB 1.x only. 2.0 is so much faster. Getting your music on the player will be much less time consuming. Given the 2.0 has been out for so long, I think you may be hard pressed to find anything with 1.x? The other aspect I forgot to mention is... are you trying to say that your computer is so old that its USB ports are incapable of USB 2.0 speeds? Device wise, anything you buys today should be USB 2.0 capable. If you have a multi-gigabyte player and your computer is old and only capable of USB 1.1, though... you might find yourself uploading your library to the player overnight the first time. If your library is pretty static, the oldness of your home computer won't annoy you too much. If you're having to move a lot of music across that interface frequently though, you'll really want a newer computer with usb 2.0 support. The computer of the future player owner says "USB". Since there's no 2.0, it must be 1.x. I'm concerned that the options for players that can interface with 1.x may be less than 2.0. Interfacability aside, it maybe as you say -- very slow. A newer computer may be in the cards for the future, but I wasn't going to bet on that. As for moving lots of music across -- my understanding is that these players stores thousands of songs. With that capacity, it is hard for me to imagine moving lots of songs over the interface on a regular basis. Then again, Bill Gates found it hard to believe that anyone would need more than 640KB disk space. Or was that memory? Any recommendations? Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Seamless WMA support also opens up the broadest options in terms of what music to get, and where. Other features to pay attention to are intuitive user interface, easy fit into pocket, and upgradability of firmware/encoding/compression. Wirless file transfer only for forward-looking technophiles. The right pick depends on your application. What are you looking to do with this portable music player, primarily? What's your preferred on-computer media player if any? What format is most of your library in? |
#6
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Dubious Dude wrote:
There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) No. USB 1.x only is just fine, just slow. It's no problem. THE biggest problem with non-Apple players is broken headphone jacks. I had three players fail within hours to days of buying them because of this. Doug McDonald |
#7
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Dubious Dude writes:
The computer of the future player owner says "USB". Since there's no 2.0, it must be 1.x. I'm not sure I'd rely on that to make that assumption. As for moving lots of music across -- my understanding is that these players stores thousands of songs. With that capacity, it is hard for me to imagine moving lots of songs over the interface on a regular basis. Then again, Bill Gates found it hard to believe that anyone would need more than 640KB disk space. Or was that memory? That goes back to requirements. If they select a disk based player that has oodles of memory, yes, after the initial load of the library onto the player, they won't have much to move back and forth. If they opt for a smaller capacity solid state memory based device, though, folks using those only put a subset of their library on the device at any one time. The bigger the player, therefore, the less I'd worry about the speed penalty of USB 1.1 transfer. Just do the initial load while the person sleeps. But if you get the make/model of the machine, I'd look on the manufacturer's site regarding the specs and see if this is all much ado about nothing. The laptop may already have usb 2.0. Best Regards, -- /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | Todd H \ / | http://www.toddh.net/ X Promoting good netiquette | / \ http://www.toddh.net/netiquette/ | http://myspace.com/bmiawmb |
#8
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"Dubious Dude" wrote in message
There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". USB is preferred. In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) I have a Nomad Jukebox which has both USB 1.1 and firewire ports. The firewire port was about twice as fast, but it was usable either way. Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Makes sense, although my Nomad Jukebox 3 broke every rule, and was still pretty useful and still runs years later. |
#9
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Todd H. wrote:
Dubious Dude writes: The computer of the future player owner says "USB". Since there's no 2.0, it must be 1.x. I'm not sure I'd rely on that to make that assumption. As for moving lots of music across -- my understanding is that these players stores thousands of songs. With that capacity, it is hard for me to imagine moving lots of songs over the interface on a regular basis. Then again, Bill Gates found it hard to believe that anyone would need more than 640KB disk space. Or was that memory? That goes back to requirements. If they select a disk based player that has oodles of memory, yes, after the initial load of the library onto the player, they won't have much to move back and forth. If they opt for a smaller capacity solid state memory based device, though, folks using those only put a subset of their library on the device at any one time. The bigger the player, therefore, the less I'd worry about the speed penalty of USB 1.1 transfer. Just do the initial load while the person sleeps. But if you get the make/model of the machine, I'd look on the manufacturer's site regarding the specs and see if this is all much ado about nothing. The laptop may already have usb 2.0. The person has no collection of music right now, and currently owns no music. Basically, the requirements are undefined, so pieces of music will likely be acquired piecemeal. Perhaps a big push at the beginning. However, I just found out that someone else has announced intentions to get a digital music player for the person. I thank you for your helpful responses. About the computer, I recall sitting down with the person and trying to find specs for the system online (it is so old that they no longer owned the paper specs). No luck for that particular model (which I don't have at hand). It was a Seanix machine. But I agree that hunting for th specs is normallybe a good first step. |
#10
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Doug McDonald wrote:
Dubious Dude wrote: There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) No. USB 1.x only is just fine, just slow. It's no problem. THE biggest problem with non-Apple players is broken headphone jacks. I had three players fail within hours to days of buying them because of this. Now *that* is disturbing. Which brand names? Did the player itself get busted at the jack port, or did the jack itself get busted (which is nicer since you only need to replace the headphones)? P.S. Found out that someone else intends to get a player for this person, but I'm still curious as to which manufacturers created the less resilient products you describe above. |
#11
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Dubious Dude" wrote in message There's iPod, then the rest. Perusing various online iPod manuals reveals that USB 2.0 is "recommended". USB is preferred. In general, does the availability of USB 1.x only make the experience of owning an MP3 play unworthwhile? (WinXP) I have a Nomad Jukebox which has both USB 1.1 and firewire ports. The firewire port was about twice as fast, but it was usable either way. Consumer Report suggests going with flash memory for physical resilience, lower power usage, and because they typically use standard batteries rather than poorly performing built-in rechargables. Makes sense, although my Nomad Jukebox 3 broke every rule, and was still pretty useful and still runs years later. Thanks, Arny. |
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