Slashdot Mirror


Treó 10: Another Portable Mass Storage Device

mblase writes: ""The Treó 10 is a lightweight, pocket-sized, digital music jukebox with the capacity to store over 3,000 songs - that's 150 hours of music." It's got twice the hard-drive space of Apple's iPod, but also half the RAM, half the battery life, and uses a much slower USB connection instead of FireWire. However, it's PC-compatible using MusicMatch Jukebox right out of the box, and costs only $250 instead of $400 for the iPod. CNet's article compares the two further."

339 comments

  1. Yeah??? by b_pretender · · Score: 1, Funny
    But it doesn't have Steve Jobs behind it, jumping up and down.

    The RIAA will probably try and stop it's production since it tends to do that with non-Apple MP3 software.

    1. Re:Yeah??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It is also usb which will take a wicked long time to fill up this 10gb monster. It would have been nice if the Treo went with firewire like the iPod which seems more appropriate for this kind of device.

    2. Re:Yeah??? by znu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm betting that whatever method it uses to transfer files from the computer isn't nearly as slick as the iPod's iTunes syncing.

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    3. Re:Yeah??? by zmooc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most people don't have firewire yet. Most PC-users, that is (and thus most people...). So there probably are a lot more customers for an USB-device than for a FireWire-device.

      --
      0x or or snor perron?!
    4. Re:Yeah??? by discogravy · · Score: 1

      i think this is really going to change fairly soon-ish (within the next year or two). first, for a lot of portable devices that need fast transfer (like ...um, mp3 players or video cameras) it'll be necessary and also, because of creative's SoundBlaster Audigy; even the base card (not the deluxe or the ultra mega deluxe or whatever the designations are,) has firewire (SB1394 port is what Soundblaster papers call it, but "firewire" just sounds cooler.)

      the only real problem with USB is it's speed, which USB 2.0 is supposed to fix, but unless there's going to be some magical firmware program or ultra easy hack that upgrades you from 1.0 to 2.0 (i dunno jack about USB 2.0, so i dunno), you're gonna need to buy new hardware; if you're going that far, you might as well get the tried and tested tech that's been on the market for a while already and is hence cheaper.

    5. Re:Yeah??? by zmooc · · Score: 2

      So that gives them a year or two to come up with a FireWire version of the device and until then their sales won't suffer because they're trying to sell something which the vast majority just cannot use without buying new hardware. By the way...with 10 gigs of space I don't really care about the speed since I can fit all of my favourites on it anyway.

      --
      0x or or snor perron?!
    6. Re:Yeah??? by rpk · · Score: 1

      As usual, PC hardware makers are too timid. Why couldn't the Treo use FireWire and just market a bundled with a PC or PCI FireWire card ? Other makers of FireWire peripherals (such as Maxtor) already do this.

    7. Re:Yeah??? by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2

      And to confuse things, Firewire 2 should be shipping on some machines in Q1 02. If this is the case, it might "leapfrog" Firewire and become the default install of the two.

      Someone check my figures here:
      USB 1.5MB/s
      Firewire 50MB/s
      USB2 60MB/s
      Firewire2 100MB/s

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

  2. Oh Yeah! by jdevons · · Score: 1

    Music all of the time! and Everywhere!

    When do they go on sale?

    --
    I do everything the voices in my head tell me to...
    1. Re:Oh Yeah! by TeknoHog · · Score: 1
      Music all of the time! and Everywhere!

      Especially in the elevator. (What kind of music did you mean? ;-)

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:Oh Yeah! by BelDion · · Score: 1

      Music all of the time! and Everywhere!

      Except when your battery runs out after a few hours...

      --

      I am BelDion's .Sig; Who the hell is Jack?
  3. nothing special here by NotAnotherReboot · · Score: 4, Troll

    This post doesn't really warrant being on the front page of slashdot really; there's already portable MP3 players with hard drives. It's no surprise that more would come out. Just because it looks slightly like the ipod doesn't mean it's any more special than another mp3 player. It's good that more of these are getting to market, but I see nothing revolutionary here, or news worthy for that matter.

    1. Re:nothing special here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but the Treo has all the styling queues of my Hunter Electronic Thermostat!! As a matter of fact based on the pic it looks EXACTLY like the case they use on their $29 cheapo model, buttons and all.. Stop in a Home Depot an check out the similarities!! The iPod wins hands-down (or on) in styling and usability.. Apple will fix the capacity/price issues soon enough.

    2. Re:nothing special here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Offtopic
      BTW, Music Match sucks. The only good thing about Music Match is that it is fairly easy to use, which is why I used to use it. Here are some of my complaints about Music Match:

      • It is buggy as hell. The super high quality setting (in advanced recording options) actually creates terrible quality mp3s. See Analysis link of http://www.r3mix.net for more info. I encoded several CDs before I realized this. Boy was I pissed. I then switched to EAC and Lame (which produces better quality mp3s anyway). The people at Music Match apparently care more about adding lots of skins/gizmos/useless features, rather than making software that actually works.

      • It will nag and nag you until you make it the default media player for all the file types it supports. Very annoying.

      • The unregistered version is crippled anyway (rips and encodes slow, must register to speed up). Also displays annoying pop-up windows when exiting.
    3. Re:nothing special here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when has apple ever tried to fix its pricing and capacity issues?

    4. Re:nothing special here by baglunch · · Score: 1
      • It's not a bug that Music Match doesn't produce as high a quality mp3 as EAC and Lame. It's called "selling to your market". MusicMatch isn't marketed to the EAC / Lame market (i.e., free and high quality), it's marketed to the non-geek-but-still-want-mp3s crowd. I used MusicMatch for a good long while and really enjoyed how easy it was to use. Stick a CD in, tell it to record, and then listen to your mp3s. I loved it. Then I found out about EAC and Lame and am going back and re-ripping my CDs. I don't think any less of MusicMatch now that I've switched over, I would still recommend it to my sister or a friend.
      • You can turn the nag feature off.
      • Are you actually complaining about a deliberate limitation of a non-registered piece of SHAREWARE? This last point is obviously troll... maybe your whole post is, too, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt on your first two points.
      --

      Work is for people who lack the imagination to play.

    5. Re:nothing special here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, this is just basically "Commodity Vendor Releases Ugly-Ass Knockoff of a Jonathan Ive Design", which come to think of it, could be the headline for quite a few stories around here. :)

    6. Re:nothing special here by damiam · · Score: 1

      How would producing a higher quality MP3 reduce the usefulness of the product to anyone?

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    7. Re:nothing special here by baglunch · · Score: 1

      It's the extra steps (and knowledge) required in the EAC / Lame solution that make it suited for a more advanced user than MusicMatch. Also, MusicMatch gives you an mp3 much more quickly. So, it's speed and ease of use vs free and high quality.

      --

      Work is for people who lack the imagination to play.

    8. Re:nothing special here by damiam · · Score: 1

      Yes, but why couldn't they just use a higher quality encoder while retaining the same ease of use? And lame isn't that slow either.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    9. Re:nothing special here by yesthatguy · · Score: 2

      Higher quality MP3s could have initially come at the expense of neato user-friendly features. By now though, that's probably not a time issue or anything, and there's no good reason not to offer a better solution as an option.

      --
      Yes! That guy!
    10. Re:nothing special here by baglunch · · Score: 1
      They went with Fraunhofer. That ain't bad. I think at the time they went with it, it was one of the best out there, and now they have a financial stake in it. Why not switch to a free and better encoder? *shrug* I don't know. The only point I had to make in all this was to point out that I can get mp3s from my CDs (using MusicMatch) in less than half the time it takes me to use EAC and then use Lame, and with far fewer steps, all using a single program... which is very attractive to someone new to ripping CDs (like I was).


      So no, Lame isn't "that slow", but the combination of EAC and then Lame is much slower than just using MusicMatch. It's the difference, perhaps, between buying a pre-assembled computer from Compaq, and assembling one for yourself. Building it yourself, you'll end up with a better product for less price, but you'll need more expertise and it'll take more time.

      --

      Work is for people who lack the imagination to play.

  4. Mp3 player || PDA Phone by sPaKr · · Score: 2, Interesting


    How long will it be before handpring and these morons start dukeing it out over the 'so cool' term Treo? They are booth personal electronic devices, looks like trademark overlap to me
    but IANAL.

    1. Re:Mp3 player || PDA Phone by flufffy · · Score: 3, Informative
      one is tee - ar - 'ee with an accent' - oh.

      the other is tee - ar - ee - 'oh with an accent.'

      both are registered with upto, 'parently.

    2. Re:Mp3 player || PDA Phone by n6mod · · Score: 1

      Oh? I couldn't find anything with a (R) on the e.Digital site, though they seemed to TM every other phrase. Handspring has TM's on Treo (and Handspring, interestingly).

      So, uhh, neither is registered with USPTO. And I'd guess Handspring will win, based on a) earlier announcements, and b) more lawyers.

      And I do think that for the purposes of trademark categories that PDA Phone == MP3 Player. The category is probably "Handheld Electronic Device" or even "Consumer Electronic Device"

      And there is certainly potential for confusion. It's not precedent in the US, but remember the "Budweiser" ruling in the UK....

      --
      You have violated Robot's Rules of Order and will be asked to leave the future immediately.
    3. Re:Mp3 player || PDA Phone by flufffy · · Score: 2
      well, i[really]anal, but i thought that public domain was enough, you don't need to 'tm' everything.

      anyway the cnet article says:

      eDigital said its Treo is pronounced "tray-o" and has an accent on the "o," while Handspring pronounces its device like the word "trio" and has a mark over the "e." Both devices have a U.S. trademark and are not the only ones with that honor. Women's shoe brand Nine West also has a trademark on Treo for use "in the field of shoes and of accessories, namely handbags, belts and hosiery," according to the Patent and Trademark Office's Web site.

      so i went to the uspto site and searched for 'treo' (tm) and found

      TREO: PORTABLE MUSIC PLAYER FOR STORAGE AND PLAYBACK OF DIGITAL MUSIC, Serial Number 78031260, Filing Date October 18, 2000 (APPLICANT) Hy-Tek Mfg. Co. Inc. CORPORATION ILLINOIS 1998 Bucktail Lane Sugar Grove ILLINOIS 60554

      TREO: computers, computer monitors, computer hardware, computer peripherals, handheld computers, personal digital assistants, electronic organizers, electronic notepads, telephones, computer gaming machines, microprocessors, computer memories, electrical circuit boards, printed circuit boards, memory cards, computer monitors, liquid crystal displays, computer keyboards, computer cables, modems, computer printers, videophones, computer disc drives, and photographic and video cameras; computer software, namely, prerecorded computer programs for personal information, management, database management software, character recognition software, telephony management software, electronic mail and messaging software, paging software, database synchronization software, computer programs for accessing, browsing and searching online databases; internet appliances; instruction manuals supplied with the foregoing

      [pretty comprehensive, huh?]

      Serial Number 76307493, Filing Date August 29, 2001, (APPLICANT) Handspring, Inc. CORPORATION CALIFORNIA 189 Bernardo Avenue Mountain View CALIFORNIA 94043

      TREO: RETAIL STORE SERVICES IN THE FIELD OF SHOES AND OF ACCESSORIES, NAMELY HANDBAGS, BELTS
      AND HOSIERY.

      TREO ENGINEERING: CAR AUDIO PRODUCTS INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO SPEAKERS, AMPLIFIERS, ACCESSORIES AND RELATED PROMOTIONAL ITEMS. Serial Number 76258297, Filing Date May 17, 2001. (APPLICANT) TREO ENGINEERING INC CORPORATION NEBRASKA 2464 S TEJON ENGLEWOOD COLORADO 80110.

      there's also stuff for insect repellent, skin moisturizer, and other stuff, including urinal deodorant ...

      as far as i can make out all have been submitted, but only one has been granted a registered mark, the shoe company. so i guess they have first dibs.

      maybe it will come down to who has the right accents - but that's what lawyers are for, right?

    4. Re:Mp3 player || PDA Phone by c=sixty4 · · Score: 1
      How long will it be before handpring and these morons start dukeing it out over the 'so cool' term Treo? They are booth personal electronic devices, looks like trademark overlap to me but IANAL.
      Plus, the name of this product has funny connotations in Sweden where Treo (no accent) is the name of a popular headache remedy.
      --
      "The good die first." "Most of us are morally ambiguous, which explains our random dying patterns." --- MST3K
  5. which usb? by Faceprint · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does this thing use USB, or USB 2.0? From what I understand, there's a HUGE speed difference.

    1. Re:which usb? by mgv · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is a huge difference. USB approximately 1.2 Mb/sec, USB 2.0 approx 50 Mb/sec IIRC.

      It doesn't say, so its probably not USB 2.0. You would say it if it had it.

      That means it will be slow to transfer the files, but not a disaster to do so.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    2. Re:which usb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      USB 2.0 is 480Mbps compared to Firewire's 400Mbps if I remember correctly (IIRC).

    3. Re:which usb? by Aleks · · Score: 1, Informative
      USB 2.0 is 480Mbps compared to Firewire's 400Mbps if I remember correctly (IIRC).

      FireWire 1 is 400 Mbps, FireWire 2 is 800 Mbps.

    4. Re:which usb? by Dahan · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're off by an order of magnitude or so. USB 1.x is 12Mbps, USB 2.0 is 480Mbps.

    5. Re:which usb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      one of you guys is talking megabits per second, the other megabytes. either way, USB 1.0 is absurdly slow for filling a 10 GB hard drive...

    6. Re:which usb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It says USB 1.1 on the spec page for their "generic" version.

    7. Re:which usb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That should read 1.2MB (not Mb, which stands for megabits).

  6. 3000 Songs!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    That's an unreal number of songs. I went to a BBQ the other weekend and was surprised to find out this guy had over 2600 songs that he had downloaded between napster and morpheus. I have a measly 120! Does anyone see themselves loading this bad boy up with that much music? Is this just a waste?

    1. Re:3000 Songs!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      My brother has 2 40 gig hard drives filled up with albums. He has over 1500 albums. You can fill the Treo up with warez as well and bring it to your freinds to share.

    2. Re:3000 Songs!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bragging?:) Great! Artists: 865, Albums: 2115, Tracks: 28028, Duration: 85 days, Format: MP3, Size: 133.0gb, Traffic: about 2-5gb/day (1261gb total) online with about 40 users that alltogether own about 50% of all music.

    3. Re:3000 Songs!? by dknj · · Score: 1

      jubilee% du -d1 Music
      64073 Music/Pop
      475621 Music/Alternative
      67465 Music/70s
      494241 Music/Dance
      125694 Music/Classical
      1503042 Music/Rap
      397308 Music/r&b
      525519 Music/Reggae
      19825 Music/Old School
      10434090 Music/Full Albums
      16761 Music/Theme Songs
      20905 Music/Other
      634 Music/Playlists
      14242897 Music

      Sad to say, this is after my 2 18gb drives (also full of mp3s) crashed :(

      -dk

    4. Re:3000 Songs!? by EvlPenguin · · Score: 2

      Huh? I have computer in my trunk with a 40 GB hard drive. Right now it's at around 75% capacity, and has ~4000 songs (in the days of napster, I was the uber-leech... though I must say I've bought atleast 50 CDs from stuff I've downloaded... but that's another story).

      Personally, I wish the PR droids would stop assuming everyone in the world used 128 kb/s encoding for their music. I prefer to use 192 kb/s when encoding, and usually don't download anything but. Really, 128 kb/s sounds like absolute shit over any decent sound system. I suppose if you're just listening with "ear buds" or some crappy $10 headphones, it doesn't make a difference. The 10 GB "embedded" drive in this device says 3000? Assuming that is at 128 kb/s (could be less), that's 2000 -- not 3000. When you have a decent album collection, 2000 is not much of anything.

      In retrospect... nah, there's no way that "3000" figure could even be 128 kb/s for a 10 GB drive... it must be something lower like 96 kb/s (which means only 1500 songs at 192 kb/s). Still better than carrying around a CD player, but if you're using this in your car, just roll your own damn mp3 player. It impresses the chicks.

      --

      --
      #nohup cat /dev/dsp > /dev/hda & killall -9 getty
    5. Re:3000 Songs!? by simetra · · Score: 1

      Crap: 97%

      --

      "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    6. Re:3000 Songs!? by zzyzx · · Score: 1

      The bands I like allow taping. I have around 2000 cds these days. My 20 gig neo jukebox is just about full and I'm giving thought to buying a 30 gig drive.

    7. Re:3000 Songs!? by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2
      there's no way that "3000" figure could even be 128 kb/s for a 10 GB drive... it must be something lower like 96 kb/s

      Interesting.
      I noticed that Apple was using a standard file rate of 192 kb/s for their marketing figures. Looks like they expect people to use the highest quality, while other companies marketing dept.s expect people to use the crappiest quality.

      I bet this bites Apple on the ass.

      Rather like when the used to measure all of their monitors by the *viewable/useable* space, NOT the size of the glass. Every other company used the (misleading) size of the glass, and that left them trying to explain that their 13.3" was the same as a 14 or 15" monitor.

      To me it is more honest to measure the storage size in terms of "real world" quality or monitors in terms of the actual viewable space you get.
      But the marketing droids take over, streching the truth as much as they can, which means every one has to also in order to compete.

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

  7. Fortune cookie tells financial future... by Fortune+Master · · Score: 5, Funny

    You will be overwhelmed by "gadget craze" and forget that carrying an IDE drive around is cheaper. Poverty to follow.

    --
    ...in bed.
    1. Re:Fortune cookie tells financial future... by Snarl · · Score: 1

      >You will be overwhelmed by "gadget craze" and >forget that carrying an IDE drive around is >cheaper. Poverty to follow.

      in bed.

    2. Re:Fortune cookie tells financial future... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmmm.. guess i'm stupid since i cannot locate the connection for a headphone on my IDE drive

    3. Re:Fortune cookie tells financial future... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. Yes you are.

      Now sit down and shut up, filthy stink child!

  8. What is it with that name by bstadil · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So is there any legal overlap between the Treo that is a handheld PDA/phone (which could potentially end up with an mp3 attachment) and the Treo that is a handheld mp3 player? Ohhh, wait, I see. The former has an accent over the 'e' whereas the latter's is on the 'o'. As observed by JC's

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
    1. Re:What is it with that name by Jonathan · · Score: 4, Informative

      So is there any legal overlap between the Treo that is a handheld PDA/phone (which could potentially end up with an mp3 attachment) and the Treo that is a handheld mp3 player? The former has an accent over the 'e' whereas the latter's is on the 'o'.

      No. As hard as it is to understand for people who only know English, accents really matter -- they aren't just there for show -- there are words in many languages that only differ by an accent.

    2. Re:What is it with that name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In English many word meanings differ by context. HAHA!

    3. Re:What is it with that name by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Man's laughter is funny, manslaughter is not.

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    4. Re:What is it with that name by SandSpider · · Score: 1
      So is there any legal overlap between the Treo that is a handheld PDA/phone (which could potentially end up with an mp3 attachment) and the Treo that is a handheld mp3 player? The former has an accent over the 'e' whereas the latter's is on the 'o'.

      No. As hard as it is to understand for people who only know English, accents really matter -- they aren't just there for show -- there are words in many languages that only differ by an accent.

      While that may be true, it is still similar enough that I would worry about copyright infringement. I can tell you that if I ever tried to market a drink called Cocoa-Cola, then I would be in a heap of trouble, and there's an extra letter in there, not just a moved accent.

      Not that I wouldn't expect them to have checked out the name with their lawyers before hand, but who can say, really?

      =Brian, WINAL

      --
      There is nothing so good that someone, somewhere, will not hate it.
    5. Re:What is it with that name by dvdeug · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      So is there any legal overlap between the Treo that is a handheld PDA/phone (which could potentially end up with an mp3 attachment) and the Treo that is a handheld mp3 player? The former has an accent over the 'e' whereas the latter's is on the 'o'.

      No. As hard as it is to understand for people who only know English, accents really matter -- they aren't just there for show -- there are words in many languages that only differ by an accent.

      Sure, so a company that's named Micrasoft is legally okay too, because the name is different from Microsoft, right? There is possible legal overlap between the two; if one attempts to be excessively similar to the other or someone decides to complain about it, there may be a suit; what the law will say depends on how much they can pay their lawyers and who decides to cut a deal.

      Accents really matter in other languages; they don't in English. I'd assume a court in America or Australia or England would be concerned about the potential confusion to the English speaking buyer. If they are Romanian trademarks and a case comes before a Romanian court, the accents would be given more importance.

    6. Re:What is it with that name by zbuffered · · Score: 1

      I don't know, I figure if your drink actually had cocoa in it, Coke might just leave you alone and wait for the consumers to have your head.

      --
      Synergy is your friend
    7. Re:What is it with that name by thumper · · Score: 1

      But that is exactly the point.

  9. Uhm....what about Archos by Psiklonik · · Score: 2, Informative

    Archos, http://www.archos.com, has been in the game for awhile now. They have a handy 20-gig Jukebox Studio 20 MP3 Player & Hard Drive, http://www.archos.com/us/products/product_500205.h tml, that dare I say rocks. Still uses USB, but it nice to not only carry your MP3 collection around, but also have a handy transport for all your big files. I have the Jukebox 6000 now, but I am hoping that St. Nick will remember my letter and hook me up with a Studio.

    --
    /sig "Shop smart! Shop S-Mart!" /endsig
    1. Re:Uhm....what about Archos by Simulant · · Score: 1

      Mod This UP! I swear there's an anti-Archos media ban. (I'm just a happy customer)

    2. Re:Uhm....what about Archos by matthewn · · Score: 1
      Media ban? PCWorld.com has reported on Archos twice since June. [one two] Did Slashdot take note? No.

      Archos media ban? No. Anti-Archos bias on Slashdot? Well, are there any 'Archos' posts modded up to 2 or higher (yet)?

    3. Re:Uhm....what about Archos by lynxgrrl · · Score: 1

      And PC World made another mention of the Archos here .

  10. info from shareholders meeting by flollywebfrog · · Score: 1

    It seems like this is the first in many similar products that will be on the market. This is from here

    -- The Company demonstrated OEM licensee Musical ElectronicsLtd.'s e.Digital-powered jukebox product scheduled to bebranded by one of Musical's OEM customers for sale through Circuit City and other retailers. This product will allow users to encode music files directly from a CD player, bypassing the need for a PC to perform digital compression.

    -- The hard-disk-drive (HDD) based music player product from OEM licensee EASTECH was demonstrated, and is slated for OEM branding.

    -- The Company demonstrated Maycom's MP2000 Internet music player, based on e.Digital's technology and reference design. The MP2000 product is scheduled to be sold on e.Digital's online store in time for the holidays.

    -- The Company announced that licensee Bang & Olufsen is readying product based on e.Digital technology for sale in their retail outlets worldwide.

    --


    ________________
    All my sig are fjdklafjkldafjkldafdaklf
    1. Re:info from shareholders meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Company announced that licensee Bang & Olufsen is readying product based on e.Digital technology for sale in their retail outlets worldwide.>

      I work in the marketing department of an agency associated with Bang and Olfusen. (That is why I am AC ;)

      I agree with most of the posters that the specs of this Treo pales in comparison to the iPod, but I have seen details on an e.Digital portable coming out in mid-2002 that WILL be the must-have-mp3 player. There is no firewire, but it has usb2, digital I/O, and a built in microphone. Furthermore, they plan to release it with 20, 40, and 60 gb hd's. I haven't used the treo before, but from what I hear, there is a simple hack that allows the user to transfer any data to the device. Don't write off the treo, they are just rushing this to market to gain brand awareness, show retailers that it will make an impact, and increase capital for future dev.

      --AC

    2. Re:info from shareholders meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work for a peer of eDigital's (That's why i am AC).

      eDigital is well known for bullshitting about what technology they have. They have never turned a profit, yet they had a $2 billion market cap about a year ago, due primarily to false hype they generated to drive up their stock price. They've been claiming various features for a while that haven't materialized - even this product isn't consistent, if you look in some specs for it it says it does 'digital encoding', other places it says 'mp3 encoding' (i highly doubt the latter).

      If i was you i would run screaming from this device. It's a solid example of market saturation - multiple products in the market have this same feature set, some smaller guy comes in and tries to make it cheaper. But that's all you get - cheap shit.

  11. mmm... moving parts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh give me a home
    where the Treo don't roam.
    Where the iPod is merely passe,

    Where seldom is seen
    the AA battery's sheen
    and Americans stop acting gay.

    This device is crap. Any sort of device that requires moving parts is asking for damage.

    Stop the madness! Promote solid state in your community today!

    1. Re:mmm... moving parts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      AA batteries have moving parts? Will wonders and my education never cease?

      And your shoulder socket and cardiovascular system? Doomed to obsolescence for containing moving parts, I guess.

      Saint_Waldo

    2. Re:mmm... moving parts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, having moving parts equates to more points of failure.

      AA batteries are much too large to be used in a portable device. Take them out and replace them with a nice small/thin lion battery and lighten the thing by a couple more ounces.

  12. Lovin' the iPod by jimhill · · Score: 4, Flamebait

    I ordered an iPod the day Apple announced it. So far since its arrival, I've taken it halfway across country patched into my car stereo, I've taken it hiking in the Jemez Mountains, I've tuned out all the banal MallMusik to get my Christmas shopping done without killing anyone, and I patch it into the ministereo in my bedroom so I can be lulled gently to sleep by whatever the randomizer kicks out.

    Oh, and I've got all my important OS X data backed up onto it.

    I'm completely sold on the iPod. This thing for me is to music what my TiVo is to TV: you'd have to kill me to get it outta my meaty paws.

    Now, for the Treo. USB? 10GB? Are they high? Syncing a portable to (in my case) a slightly less portable shouldn't ever be something that takes an overnighter plus to accomplish. That alone would kill the Treo for me.

    I'm guessing from the fact that special "music management" software is provided that there's some kind of DRM scheme involved. I like Apple's approach: every iPod comes in a plastic sleeve with "Don't steal music" on it. My machine. My ethical conundrum. They stayed out of it, as they should have.

    Still, it'll be nice to get some feedback from folks who've actually used one -- I'm especially curious about the DRM speculation.

    --
    Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    1. Re:Lovin' the iPod by sulli · · Score: 3, Informative

      I love my iPod too. Now that I have iPod Free File Access (freeware) the one big problem, that you can't transfer songs iPod->Mac, is solved - and the sound quality is very nice (though a little quiet in the car via a tape adapter), and the capacity, battery life, and form factor kick ass. Buy one if you have a Mac with Firewire, you won't regret it.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    2. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the Mac approach all over - more expensive, slightly better in some areas but woefully underpowered - as if being away from the cutting edge was a virtue.

      Then you have the Mac users themselves: once they've spent the money and got the thing home they will NEVER EVER admit that there is anything wrong with their purchase, unless it's to join a class action lawsuit of course. To a certain extent you see this phenomenon with cars, but Apple really has them brainwashed. Amazingly, even the fact that the Treo has 10G of storage can become a disadvantage when they start to whine about USB.

      Don't bother trying to educate Mac users. You can lead them to information but you can't make them think. (Steve takes care of that)

    3. Re:Lovin' the iPod by SilentChris · · Score: 1, Insightful
      *scratches his head* Post Mac-friendly propaganda and you get +1 Insightful?

      As for the USB vs. Firewall connection: I agree that faster is always better. Heck, let's go full-hog: I want an MP3 player that has a PCI interface. Slap it right into the tower when I'm ready to transfer.

      But most computers, nowadays, only have USB (mostly because of restrictive, expensive licensing on the part of Sony and *ahem* Apple). The fact of the matter remains, with 5 gigs of storage, 10 gigs of storage, you're probably not going to be syncing to change *all* the music that often. In a best case scenario, you can probably even rip all your CDs, copy a majority of them to the device, then only need to add new songs when a new CD comes out.

      Further, if you're using something more high-end in terms of compression (like WMA for instance) you're talking about 1-1.5 megs a 3-4 minute song. 3500-5000 songs per iPod? How often are you going to sync the whole thing?

    4. Re:Lovin' the iPod by jimhill · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just do the postin', not the moderatin'. If I knew what goes through _their_ heads I could make a zillion dollars.

      I take exception at the term "Mac-friendly propaganda", though. I bought the product because I liked its specs. I like the product and I said so, and why. In the old days, that used to be considered "word of mouth" and could be good or bad. It could make or break a new movie, a new book, a new gadget or gizmo far more effectively than any amount of advertising or promotion could do.

      Liking something isn't necessarily parroting the marketing hype any more than disliking something is Baseless Slander and Unfounded Scurrilousness.

      Yeah, yeah...I'm wandering a bit afield of the original topic. Just wanted to burn off a karma point or two to try to clarify my position.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    5. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > *scratches his head* Post Mac-friendly propaganda and you get +1 Insightful? <

      Yeah, I know there was a time when if you posted anyting none-Linux you get mod'ed down, it's gone to the dogs no people can post stuff about none-open source stuff, and be modded up :(

    6. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Bongo · · Score: 2

      Don't bother trying to educate Mac users. You can lead them to information but you can't make them think.

      Please try to expand your thinking beyond simple categories. By "mac users" you presumably mean "anyone who uses a mac".

      I know you're speaking generally about people you've met or who's comments you've read, but by turning that into a general statement about how "mac users don't think", well, boyyy-o, you're just making yourself look simple-minded, and insulting a whole bunch of people who happen to use computers with an Apple badge.

      But hey, you're entitled to your opinion. Just try to make it a good one. :P

    7. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Sc00ter · · Score: 2
      the songs are in a hidden folder on the iPod. Unhide it and copy it right back to your hard drive. Simple as that.

    8. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Don't bother trying to educate Mac users. You can lead them to information but you can't make them think."

      Bitter much? You know, there's another reason Mac users never complain after they get a piece of Apple hardware home. I'll let you try to figure out what it is.

      And as far as 10GB being a disadvantage, think for a second. If you have a 10-ton pile of dirt but nothing to move it with but a coal shovel, is that better than have a five-ton pile of dirt and an end loader? Catching on...?

      Some people like to buy quality, stylish, fun products that are powerful and easy to use; what's your problem with that?

    9. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Myxorg · · Score: 1
      But most computers, nowadays, only have USB (mostly because of restrictive, expensive licensing on the part of Sony and *ahem* Apple).


      Oh yea firewire is so expensive, really high end stuff. Let's see checking Price watch...firewire cards are 14 dollars. Well that just blew my budget.
    10. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Baki · · Score: 2

      They might sell an iPod package that contains a $40 firewire interface (they are available for as little as that), then wintel PC's can access the iPod too.

      Most modern intel Laptops already have a firewire interface built in.

      The iPod might just be an extra 'killer-app' (apart from DV) that helps to spread the firewire interface in the PC market (at the cost of USB2).

      I hope more interesting firewire devices arrive, this will eventually lead to firewire become standard in PC's too.

    11. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, I just trolled a bunch of simple minded Mac users.

    12. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Refrag · · Score: 1

      What the hell does Sony have to do with FireWire? Other than the fact that they call their power-anemic version of FireWire "iLink."

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
    13. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      hiking in the Jemez Mountains

      Cool. Where at?
      (If these are the Jemez I am thinking of, I am from around those parts. LA.)

    14. Re:Lovin' the iPod by zbuffered · · Score: 1

      Hey buddy, I like music as much as the next guy, but you took it hiking with you in the mountains? Man, what a waste! You can listen to music anywhere for the rest of your life, but when you decide to take a road-trip to the mountains and go wandering around in them, the entire point of the excercise is to free your mind from the day-to-day banalities of life and experience the great outdoors!
      That being said, I'm jealous; I want one. But only on long drives and in the mall, not in the mountains.

      --
      Synergy is your friend
    15. Re:Lovin' the iPod by muzeke · · Score: 1
      You know, with my Rio, I didn't change my music that much. But with the iPod, I find myself *not* resyncing *all* the music, but good chunks more often.

      I'd change... oh, about 500MB or so of music every week. That could be more often than most people. And because I do this with such regularity, you know what I noticed?

      Even firewire seems slow.

      Can you imagine doing something like this with USB or via the serial port like the one in the original Rio? Not me, man.

      So just think about it, you may not be changing your music that much, simply because it's not practical.

    16. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rotfl.

      Firewire cards are cheap. They could be bundled with MP3 players for about the cost of a new music CD. Who will step up to the challange?

    17. Re:Lovin' the iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. Windows users wouldn't get upset at being slighted. Seing how Microsoft does it to them all the time already.

    18. Re:Lovin' the iPod by sakusha · · Score: 2

      Sony is relevant because they were the first licensee of Firewire, they got a low cost-per-chip royalty deal as an early adopter. Sony is out to push Firewire as a standard because it costs them less to produce than any other licensee except Apple. It's to their competitive advantage to see that Firewire is in every Sony consumer video product.

  13. I don't see one thing unique about this device by John_McKee · · Score: 1

    What is special here? Why is this notable at all? I don't really follow the comparison to the iPod. As noted, it has half the battery life, a USB connection, is larger, and is missing all the great Apple industrial design. The only thing that I have seen in this article is the comparison to the Handspring Treo name, and maybe the form factor.

  14. Not Just Your MP3 Player by darkPHi3er · · Score: 4, Interesting

    in the just completed (rather dull) Fall COMDEX, i spoke to a number of people who had iPod's, they all loved them, BUT, about half of them were using them as portable storage, in addition to their MP3 duties....

    most popular use was transferring movies to your iPod for viewing through your (apple, obviously) notebook.....

    at 10GB and 250$, this also becomes a good alternative for the Wintel crowd as a "Personal Storage Device"...

    you could put a movie file, some MP3/WMA's, TeleTubbie Pr0n, etc on this, your backups of key programs, data, etc...

    for the money this is a LOT cheaper (if slower -- til USB 2) then the 1394 external drives people (including me) have been buying and much more portable....

    what other uses can /.r's come up with????
    ......

    --
    Ten quid, she's so easy to blind. And not a word is spoken...
    1. Re:Not Just Your MP3 Player by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slower than USB 2? The USB 2 numbers you are thinking of are theoritical rates. It can not sustain that rate for anything other than burst and it will be very cpu intensive.

    2. Re:Not Just Your MP3 Player by znu · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Can you boot from it? Newer Macs can boot off of an iPod, which means you can install OS X on it, sit down at any Mac made in the last couple of years, hook it up, reboot, and have your setup up and running in around a minute.

      I guess it doesn't matter with the Treo; it would probably be too painfully slow to run a system off of a USB drive anyway.

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    3. Re:Not Just Your MP3 Player by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      for the money this is a LOT cheaper (if slower -- til USB 2)...

      Not the first time I've heard USB 2 mentioned like that. This device is not USB 2, and when (if?) everyone starts using USB 2, this device will still be plugging along at (theoretical peak) 12Mbps. Of course, an updated version of this device may support USB 2 (or, more likely, FireWire) eventually. By that time the updated iPod will probably have 20GB of storage capacity at 800Mbps.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    4. Re:Not Just Your MP3 Player by rbrunner · · Score: 1

      I am considering getting an iPod, but not because its a good price for an external drive. FireWire cases for laptop drives are about $120, and a 20G drive to put in it costs $120, so neither the iPod nor the Treo are particularly good storage values.

  15. iPAQ or any Pocket PC 2002 and iPlay best of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just get an iPAQ or any of the new Pocket PC 2002s and load up iPlay mp3 player. Battery life is very long thanks to the cache, and you get a 16-band EQ to tailor the output. Lots more about it here:

    http://40th.com/wce/iplay/

  16. Advertisement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this, an ad for the iPod?

    Seriously, anyone with a PC and/or lacking Firewire should check out the Archos Jukebox. 20GB, USB 2.0, recording. File transfers. Works great.

  17. Why this costs $150 less by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    * Lame packaging
    * USB, not FireWire
    * Can't act as a hot-swappable hard drive.

    1. Re:Why this costs $150 less by telstar · · Score: 2, Funny

      You left off the part about the lack of the Apple logo which always seems to increase the price of hardware.

  18. Nice, but can you boot off of it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carrying around a bootable Darwin drive (iPod) is a good thing.

    1. Re:Nice, but can you boot off of it? by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 1, Troll

      Carrying both? Priceless...

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    2. Re:Nice, but can you boot off of it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to nitpick, but how many *NON-portable* pocket-pussies are there?
      Do you just have really really really large pockets?

  19. Why is capacity measured in songs? by Angron · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why is it that nearly every press release or announcement about a digital music playing device describes the storage capacity in terms of the number of songs it can hold? Since when is a 'song' a standard unit of measure? I personally use high bitrate (VBR, 128kbps floor, 320kbps ceiling, LAME) mp3's for most of my music, leaving me at about 1.5MB per minute of music. This usually results in their estimates being completely different from what I'd actually be able to put on the device.

    Another problem is that the bitrate can be dramatically different among the songs in someone's collection, ranging from 128kbps for some songs to a maximum 320kbps for others; yet these announcements completely ignore this! Are they afraid to tell us exactly how many MB or GB the device actually has? Or do they just seek to try and do simple math for us based on some predetermined 'common' bitrate?

    I want real measurements, not arbitrary ones. I don't buy cars that get "three full drives per every tank of gas", and I don't buy music players that hold "xxx minutes of music".

    -Angron

    1. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this down. The link to the Treo website clearly said 10gb, so your assertion was pointless.

    2. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Steve+B · · Score: 2
      Why is it that nearly every press release or announcement about a digital music playing device describes the storage capacity in terms of the number of songs it can hold?

      Because then they can puff up the advertised capacity by using 2-minute songs coded at 64 Kbps. They mention the actual capacity in standard units (and even there they puff it up by using K=1000 instead of K=1024) in the fine print, and would avoid even that if they could get away with it.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    3. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. It's nice for the company to tell us the average number of minutes worth of music we can expect to store on the device. After all, cassette tapes, and CDs are all labeled with how many minutes of music it can contain. The average consumer shouldn't really have to care about MB of storage and data transfer rates. Consumers want to know how many songs they can store, how long the device can play the songs, and how long will it take to transfer their music to and from the device. The rest of us nerds can look at the detailed specs if we really feel like calculating all this ourselves.

    4. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by nehril · · Score: 5, Insightful
      because "songs" is actually a good way to describe approximate capacity to the average person. Try explaining "VBR, 128kbps floor, 320kbps ceiling, LAME" to your mother, along with a statistical analysis of how many femtoseconds of creative sonic intellectual property (or music) that gets you. And remind her of the difference between KBps and Kbps while you're at it.


      Or you get your head out of your pci slot, and say "about a thousand songs."

    5. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by steeef · · Score: 1

      it's still a valid point. saying "holds x songs" is meaningless to me.

    6. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Danoir · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you have never heard of something people in the business call Marketing. It's really not that difficult to figure out. People don't always buy something because of the intrinsic merit it has. Sometimes, they have to be convinced that it is good and virtuous. This is where Marketing comes in. Marketing is meant to strip out all the information the customer needs (such as bites, and bit-rates, duh) and give them a clear and concise method of comparison. For instance, Apple "markets" their iPod under the slogan "1000 songs in your pocket". Guess what. That's about what people can put in an iPod. I would venture to say that most people have mp3 collections with most of the songs having similar bit-rates. I believe the most common bit-rate is straight-up 128. The iPod is clearly marked as having that 1000 Songs figure come from 160K encoding at an average of 4 minutes per song. Apple also makes it very clear that the iPod has a 5GB capacity. Given that the common encoding rate is lower that this, people might (crossing fingers here) be able to fit MORE than 1000 songs in their iPods. Remarkable. Seriously, dude. How is this not obvious? Everyone has to sell their widgets to less-than-extremely-knowledgeable people and marketing simply makes that easier for them.

      D

    7. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by astr0boy · · Score: 1

      why? it gives you a ballpark, and if you know your songs are about twice as big, then you should automaticly just divide by two.

      --

      -----
      so i says to mable, i says

    8. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by sulli · · Score: 1

      Because most users have no idea what you are talking about, but know what a "song" is.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    9. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by CtrlPhreak · · Score: 2

      If you read fine print (got my iPod poster outa the latest macworld) the measurement is taken with 4min songs at 10kbps. That's about avarage for the masses.

      On my poster, it is stated in one of the feature blurbs and not at the bottom in the fine print what the actual capacity is. They aren't out there to fool the consumer, if they were they'd have a lot of pissed off geeks comming after them. Ever wonder why the mac following is so great? It's because mac people know what they are talking about when it comes to computers (or have someone around them that does.) It's the same way with the linux community. Apple realizes this.

      Also, if everybody uses the K=1000 unit, wouldn't that be the standard? Stop whining about it.

      --
      WikiAfterDark.com It's a sex wiki, go now!
    10. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why they also say "it is 5 gigabytes"... it's not like it's a secret what the real capacity of the drive is.

    11. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I don't buy music players that hold "xxx minutes of music".

      Here's a question: What happens if you go over their rated music minutes maximum?

      Does it explode? :-)

    12. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Also, if everybody uses the K=1000 unit, wouldn't that be the standard? Stop whining about it.

      If all companies started quoting that "laptop" kg were 5% lighter than "real" kg would you be so willing to accept it?

      Just as firm and fast as the Kilobyte, the kg is predefinded and simply does not change no matter what kind of history-changing a company wants to do.

      1 kg = 1000 grams
      1 bit = On or Off
      1 nybble = 2^2 bits
      1 byte = 2^3 bits
      1 word = Memory bus width on your computer. Probably 2^4 or 2^5 bits.
      1 k = 2^10 bytes

      And that's the way it is. Its been standard like that for decades, I see no reason to let Maxtor/WD/Fujitsu et al. warp reality.

      Next thing you know they will be telling me my car gets 100 mpg, or my microwave is 10kWatts. Impossible you say! No -- those are "Car" miles and "Microwave" watts.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    13. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by reddeno · · Score: 1

      "This usually results in their estimates being completely different from what I'd actually be able to put on the device."

      That's the point. Joe Sixpack likes to see that he can play 1500 mp3s on his little device. Except that they're all at 64kbps. More impressive, no?

    14. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by matusa · · Score: 1

      Because the laymen does not understand GB or MB... that is simply an artificial buzz term. But number of songs they can easily grasp.

      of course you'd expect /. to post the technical term. damn =)

    15. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Emil+Brink · · Score: 2

      Well, I agree with what you're saying in principle, but some of those rules (I hesitate to call them definitions) are simply not accurate. A better meaning of "byte" is "the smallest addressable piece of memory on your computer". For most of today's microprocessors, that makes a byte 8 bits wide. Older machines had 9-bit bytes, and 36-bit words. For some bizarre processors, a byte is a single bit; you might want to disregard this rule in those cases to preserve your sanity. ;^). Further, how wide would you make a "word" on a typical x86/Athlon system today? Hint: the memory bus has been 64 bits wide for a long time... I think the width of (integer) registers and/or execution units is a better measure of word width (aka the "bittyness" of a CPU), since that says more about the programming model of the CPU in question. Being primarily a software dude, that's more interesting to me than the width of the bus. Anyway, just my two cents.

      --
      main(O){10<putchar(4^--O?77-(15&5128 >>4*O):10)&&main(2+O);}
    16. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by Baki · · Score: 2

      How long is a "song"? They should just measure capacity in time. A classical CD may not have 10 3-minute "songs", but have one 60 minute concerto.

    17. Re:Why is capacity measured in songs? by shepd · · Score: 1

      >For some bizarre processors, a byte is a single bit; you might want to disregard this rule in those cases to preserve your sanity.

      'Bin there, done that. Not with real software, fortuantely, but with ainchent PLCs. [Didn't have to do much either since they were pretty much all malfunctioning -- got an easy pass in that class!] :-)

      But I'm talking about the definitions which, over time, are written overwhelmingly in the most computer textbooks. You'd be hard pressed to find a computer book from most decades where computers were popular (70's-up) that would describe a byte as anything but 8 bits.

      >I think the width of (integer) registers and/or execution units is a better measure of word width (aka the "bittyness" of a CPU), since that says more about the programming model of the CPU in question

      Very right, and that's why the "word" definition is usually left pretty loose in textbooks. I'd probably say an Athlon has a 32-bit word, since virtual the mode is what's most used on it.

      >Being primarily a software dude, that's more interesting to me than the width of the bus.

      Totally understood. But imagine programming software nowadays if every texbook had a different definition of bits and bytes.

      Computer memory sizes are a bit like Imperial vs. US measurements in that they vary. But fortunately when you pick one (eg. US or x86) the measurements stay the same.

      Anyways, KB has never changed once to the best of my knowledge. But then again, I've never played about with core memory, so maybe I haven't been "in the business" long enough. :)

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  20. Only 10GB for $250? by UltraBot2K1 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    My God! Doesn't anyone here read pricewatch?


    This is yet another attempt by a greedy corporation to cash-in on pseudo-Geeks. The real Geeks, though, know that for $250 you can get a 100 GB of storage and have 10x the tunes. I can't believe Slashdot is running a story like this when I've been able to order a bigger hard drive than that for cheaper than that for years. I have all the portable music storage I need (all my They Might Be Giants and Ben Folds five albums, plus lots of leftover space), without getting price-gouged by greedy corporations.

    --

    Slashdot: Open Source, Closed Minds.

    1. Re:Only 10GB for $250? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, Dumba$$, think before you type.

      Real geeks know that a 100G drive doesn't weigh several OUNCES and are a 2-3 times the size of the player. Are you going to stick a 3.5 HD in your pocket to listen to tunes?

      The iPod weighs 6.5 ounces, much of that is the hard drive, so can you buy a hard drive *that* small for that little $$? The answer is no.

  21. Better = Costs more?? by acomj · · Score: 2

    makes sense to me. Products that are worse and cost more don't survive.

    Battery life matter much to me, so I use my Minidisc (40 hrs aa per charge). Those these units definetly have there plusses.

  22. why would you want this when you have the terapin? by metalhed77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    http://www.thinkgeek.com/stuff/gadgets/57a3.shtmlT he Terapin Mine Handheld
    Uses ETHERNET and USB, runs linux and has 10 gigs of storage plus audio out and MP3 playing abilities. Now, why would you want a stinkin' ipod?

    --
    Photos.
  23. Similar announcements. by fireboy1919 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sony has a laptop they call the "Vaio." It uses currently available technology in order to create a laptop. Its better than other ones, but more expensive.

    Nike makes shoes. They're better than others, but more expensive.

    McDonalds makes hamburgers. They taste good, but the ones from Steak & Shake taste better. However, they are more expensive.

    In a thriving industry with hundreds of products which have only a few distinguishing features, why is it worth mentioning one more?

    Perhaps this breaks some ground that I'm not aware of. If anyone has any insight, enlighten me.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    1. Re:Similar announcements. by MindStalker · · Score: 2

      Actually Vaios are cheaply made, they good great and have alot of nifty features. But they break, often.

    2. Re:Similar announcements. by WasterDave · · Score: 1, Troll

      Moderators: How exactly is this offtopic?

      Someone posts a wholly useless news article to the front page of slashdot, and someone takes the piss out of it. It's anything BUT offtopic.

      Dave :(

      --
      I write a blog now, you should be afraid.
    3. Re:Similar announcements. by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 1

      Am I the only lucky SOB out there with a Vaio that's never had problems? (I do not know, nor have I ever, had any financial stake in Sony.) I bought a Vaio PCG-C1X over two years ago now. It wasn't quite state of the art, but come on, how can you beat such a cute little computer with an integrated digital camera? Well, after two years, many drops, thumps, bumps, and kicks (I was pissed off at Windows,) it still runs perfectly. The hard drive has acquired about 15 bad sectors, but I've had 3 supposed 'server' drives die completely in the same period of time. The hardware still functions perfectly. Yeah, the case may be a little chipped, dented, scratched, and in some places actually broken (the silly little door that hides the VGA-out port. Why do companies insist on putting silly little cheap plastic doors on notebooks?) But, it still works fine. In fact, it dual boots Mandrake and Windows XP just fine. Yes, Windows XP on a Pentium MMX 266 with 64MB of RAM. Scary thought, but it's snappier than Windows Me.

      --
      Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
      The purpose of that site was not known.
    4. Re:Similar announcements. by Soulseek · · Score: 1
      It's true this is not really news as far as technological implementation is concerned. It doesn't offer any one feature that hasn't been available in other hard-drive based players in the last two years. But as someone who's been keeping very close watch on this market for very long, and having owned an archos jukebox, a pjb100 and now a wonderful, wonderful iPod that won't bloody talk to my PC I'm glad to see the Treo mentioned on Slashdot. Assuming it doesn't have any glaring problems (I'm gonna find out tomorrow :) it's the biggest leap in space&features to price ratio in a new HD based player that I can remember.

      The treo's been delayed for an entire year, and now that it's out it doesn't seem like eDigital is going out of its way to let people know about it, and at least for now, you can only order it online. Letting the right crowd know about it here is exactly the sort of thing that's gonna make other companies with similar products rethink their price tag.

      --

      -- Classism is the new racism
    5. Re:Similar announcements. by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      I would agree that the announcement of new products is beginning to swap /. a little too much. Milestone releases like the iPod need to be main stories here to allow us to discuss them, but the second, third, fourth and fifth follow up clone are of little interest to most of us.

      This is worse in the PDA department, where seemingly every week we have a couple of new machines out, with the usual 'will it run linux' story. Little of the discussion is to do with function, mainly its to do with the sexiness of the product.

      Everyone knows that more women will consider sleeping with you if you run MacOS than any windows or linux flavour. They think your a 'middle seat' kind of guy by default, and you probably wash every day. So the iPod most likely has the same effect. So more of us want one!

      Lets have an experiment. All the single guys with iPods, and all the single guys with a similar device go out on Friday night and try to get laid. You have to wear your iPod / other at all times. We count the %age for each group to get a women into bed / a toilet cubicle in a club / car. My bet is iPod wins by a mile!

      Tip - Let the ladies touch the iPod - it feels sooo nice they'll get shivers! They'll confuse these feelings with feelings of attraction to you! A guaranteed result!

      Just make sure if you take them home that you warn your Mom not to wait up for you! That could scupper everything. Oh - and don't forget to get those party hats!

    6. Re:Similar announcements. by timftbf · · Score: 1

      Nike, (like most 'label' producers), makes advertising logos that Sheeple are prepared to pay to wear. The fact that trainers are a convenient delivery vector for said advertising is irrelevent.

    7. Re:Similar announcements. by brunes69 · · Score: 2

      HOw exactly was the iPod a "Milestone release"? Creative had the nomad out for what, a year and a half? ANd guess what, it worked with PC's AND Macs! Imagine! The horror! I still odn't understand wht people are making syck a big freakin deal about the goddamned iPod. Only thing it has that a billion othe rproducts in its arean don't have is firewire, and thats with good reason... MOST PEOPLE DON'T HAVE FIREWIRE.

    8. Re:Similar announcements. by arson1 · · Score: 1

      size. weight. interface. speed. battery life.

      While it might not be a "milestone" of anything, it does all of those better than anything else I've seen. Plus, you can play breakout on it.

      I believe users of a lesser platform can get a firewire card for arounf 30 bucks. Also, you can use the iPod with Windows. Doesn't look like their is a linux solution yet, but you're probably used to that :-)

      Try using a fucking product, or at least read up of it before you decide to comment on it. It makes you look like less of an idiot/asshole.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    9. Re:Similar announcements. by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      One reason.
      Style.

      You've either got it...

  24. What about SDMI? by thesolo · · Score: 2

    Neither the article nor the product web site have info on it, so I'll ask here: does the Treo have SDMI on it?

    If so, its instantly worthless.

    1. Re:What about SDMI? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the sites linked states that the device can be used to "transfer" data.

      Since the ability to transfer from the device to a pc or similar is contradictory to SDMI requirements i'd have to say no

      and it's about bloody time someone made a good non-SDMI player

  25. Not a Mac fan but... by pinkpineapple · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...I bought an iPod and got to admit that after passing the feeling of spending too much for not much more, I love the iPod.

    The not much more ends up making all the difference. Having a firewire drive I can carry with me and hot plug to my home machine and transfer music when I need it the most and the fastest I can before leaving home is just phenomenal.

    Having twice as much of memory gives me 20 mins of skip free music. A must for this symphonies. The size and design are just too good. Hummm, I love the click of the wheel of the jog shuttle. The interface is also simple and so convenient and so easy to use.

    Finally, the battery is a big winner: reloading the unit while connected to firewire, I never ran out of battery like I did all the time on a walkman or even a Rio.

    And little people know about the fact that there is a flash eeprom that stores the firmware OS of the machine and Apple plans to release a fix for early bugs, better experience. The other units, er, you just have to buy the new model sorry.

    I'll get the software that let's it connect to Windoz. Linux support is probably right at the corner when enough people will buy that device.

    Two thumbs up and I am lucky enough to have it before Christmas.

    --
    -- I feel better now. Thanks for asking.
    1. Re:Not a Mac fan but... by znu · · Score: 2

      All that RAM in the iPod isn't really for skip protection. It's so that the hard drive can be spun down most of the time. That saves a ton of battery power, and vastly reduces the chances of the device getting damaged in a shock. If Apple has done things cleverly, I'd be surprised if the drive had to be spun up for more than a minute every hour (assuming you're just playing through a playlist, so the device knows what songs are coming up and can read ahead to load as many songs as will fit in RAM).

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    2. Re:Not a Mac fan but... by shandrew · · Score: 1
      Finally, the battery is a big winner: reloading the unit while connected to firewire, I never ran out of battery like I did all the time on a walkman or even a Rio.


      Doesn't the iPod use the power supplied by the firewire bus to recharge?

    3. Re:Not a Mac fan but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep.

  26. ... and we criticize Good Morning, America? by berteag00 · · Score: 1

    It seems that each new device along these lines gets a vapor-ware article, a "delayed release" article, a release article, two or three "Tom's Hardware compares..." articles, plus a human interest story or two.

    Honestly, cool hardware is great. (I was drooling over those HP Blade servers for almost half an hour!) But there are zillions of personal, portable MP3 players out there ... did we really need to see another one?

  27. woo-hoo! by jpellino · · Score: 5, Funny

    wow! bigger AND slower!
    but it runs under windows, so let's all party!
    *sigh*

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    1. Re:woo-hoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      but it runs under windows, so let's all party!

      Yeah, I don't see anything about it working on Mac or Linux either.

  28. Half the Interface? by helixblue · · Score: 1, Troll

    Looks like it's got half the interface & looks to me as well. Kinda like buying a Yugo and comparing it to a Mercedes. Not to mention that and taking 10 hours to download your music rather than the 12 minutes on an iPod.

    I just got my iPod on Thursday, and it's been a trip. Before I leave to work, I drag & drop the albums I think I want today (from my 80G archive), then I just drag around the iPod in the car, in my cubicle at work, walking around, etc.

    If it wasn't for the fact that I can replace all my music in a matter of minutes, the iPod would have died a miserable premature death.

    That and having it recharge batteries from the firewire port is pretty slick, though I haven't run out yet.

    1. Re:Half the Interface? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      80Gig hard drive eh? wow, must be inversely proportional to the size of your penis.

    2. Re:Half the Interface? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ::Before I leave to work, I drag & drop the albums I think I want today... ::

      You're on the computer BEFORE leaving for work? Man... eat breakfast, read the newspaper, jerk off... ANYTHING but that!

    3. Re:Half the Interface? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you jerk off without a computer?

  29. Let's submit in bytes, not "songs" or "hours" by dstone · · Score: 5, Informative

    with the capacity to store over 3,000 songs - that's 150 hours of music

    First, thank you for the story. But I'm going to plead to audio-device story submitters now: For god's sake, when posting the story to Slashdot, please talk to your fellow geeks in geek-speak, not copy-and-pasted condescending marketing terms. I can get that from CNET or MSN or my local news anchor. 3,000 songs? 150 hours? Based on what bitrate? How big is this compared to a PC hard drive? Will this store my existing collection that takes N gigs? Obviously, we can find the real specs if we hit the company's website, but do us a favor and give us the geeky bits when submitting the story.

    FWIW, this Treo has a 10 gig drive, so I guess the 3,000 song figure is based on approx 3.3 megs per song. (Kind of low, really.) The 150 hour figure is apparently based on something between 128 and 160 kbps.

    Okay, end of rant. Cool device.

  30. Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You're not going to "fill up that 10gb monster" every day, you know. With a hard drive that big, most users can fill it up once, update it occasionally, and forget it otherwise. USB is fine.

    1. Re:Who cares? by b_pretender · · Score: 2
      With a hard drive that big, most users can fill it up once, update it occasionally, and forget it otherwise.


      rsync is your friend when it comes to this matter.

    2. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHA, you get one of these with USB... what's the theoretical transfer rate? 10Mbit for USB vs. 400Mbit for Firewire?!? You do the math and say that it doesn't matter again... (still laughing...)

    3. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like that puny 4200 RPM laptop drive could handle 400Mbps anyway.... Of course, it can certianly handle 10Mbps, and that is the bottle neck. Pretty ass bleedin cool to transfer a full album of mp3s in a matter of seconds.

  31. Re:why would you want this when you have the terap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps because...

    • The iPod is cheaper.
    • The iPod is faster. (10Mbit ethernet doesn't hold a candle to FireWire)
    • The iPod has an innovative, fast, easy to use user interface which one can use without looking at the unit. This is a-typical apple. Why should I care about my mp3 files? I should care about my music, which is what iTunes and the iPod let me do.
    • It looks better.
    • It's smaller.

    Yeah, those are the primary reasons I bought my iPod.

  32. Any copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it has copy prevention on it, it sure as hell isn't making my Christmas wish list.

  33. I don't understand these objections to USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Syncing a portable to (in my case) a slightly less portable shouldn't ever be something that takes an overnighter plus to accomplish

    Who cares? Who has so much music in your collection that they can't fit all, or at least most, of it on a 10GB drive?!? Maybe you and I do, but we're the exceptions, not the rule. Most users will only suffer the "overnight" wait once.

    The way people like you are whining, you'd think you had to sit there and wait for 10GB to stream across every time you turn the thing on. It doesn't work that way.

    1. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by jimhill · · Score: 2

      The point is, I have some 60GB of MP3s on my machines...and increasing as I slowwwwly get my CDs ripped. No, I don't completely replace all the music on the iPod every time I sync it -- but I could, and it would take less time than a single trip through my .newsrc. USB types don't have that luxury.

      Something I found amusing about Apple's promotional material for the iPod was the way they gushed that it would hold 100 CDs -- your Entire! Collection! Chyeah...I'm at a shade under 700 and counting. And I don't think I'm _that_ unusual with music.

      As for whether we're the exceptions, I don't think we are. The people who only own a few CDs aren't going to buy a gizmo like this: they're going to take the wallet o' CDs and their DiscMan(tm)(c)(r)(pat pend) when they go out.

      Now, you can call kvetching about USB a "whine" if you like, but if you could transfer data at 400 Mb/s with one connector and 12Mb/s with another -- why on earth would you tolerate the dog-slow version?

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    2. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know. I have around 200 CDs, and that's considered a lot by most of my friends.

    3. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by A_Milne · · Score: 0

      As a point, both of these devices offer the capability to move data files as well

      while you may not sync your music that often (and I probablly wouldn't, If I owned a mac and an ipod). The speed difference would really come in to its own when using it to transfer data.

      If ive backed a few files up to it I want them off the disc as quick as I can so I can use them.

      Also I have heard of hacks (im not even sure how big a hack) to use the ipod as a boot device. Try that over USB

      Andrew Milne
      This comment posted by a person who doesnt own a mac and has never used one more than to have a look in a shop.

      --
      Flame my comments, not me.
    4. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by VirtualAdept · · Score: 1

      If I had a Mac, then, I would get an iPod. Unfortunately, I own a PC that lacks firewire. USB is a lot better for me than the *other* alternatives that my PC gives me. Can you imagine doing this over a standard serial connction? *shudder* VA

    5. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2

      I have a bit over 500 myself. Don't think that is too unusual.
      Plus I have 700+ albums from back in the day before these new-fangled CD things. But I was in radio back then. (And basically one of the guys from _High Fidelity_ but I have reformed since.)

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

    6. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2

      Got a spare slot? Firewire cards can be found for about 30$US.

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

    7. Re:I don't understand these objections to USB by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2
      Also I have heard of hacks to use the ipod as a boot device.

      Not a hack. As long as your machine will boot of off 1394, then it works.

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

  34. ??? by autopr0n · · Score: 2, Funny

    Who the fuck needs to be able to boot from a god damn MP3 player?!

    This is a completely ridiculous feature...

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The world doesn't need you either, but you're still here.

    2. Re:??? by MasterOfDisaster · · Score: 1

      That's one of the nice features of an iPod. It's not a firewire hard drive. It's not an Mp3 player. It's a bit of both. You can boot off it. You can listen to music on it. That's what makes it such a cool little box. It's also friggin tiny and has a long lasting battery. If it was simply an mp3 player, or a protable HD, it wouldnt be cool. It's apple's combo of both that makes it special

      --
      The opinions in this post are ficticious. Any similarity to actual opinions, real or imagined, is purely coincidental.
    3. Re:??? by 4minus0 · · Score: 1

      "This is a completely ridiculous feature..."

      this coming from the apparent webmaster of autopr0n.com

      sigh

      --
      You've got an easy breezy wind at your back...most of the time.
    4. Re:??? by Lally+Singh · · Score: 2

      Call it a firewire disk with a built in mp3 decoder. Being able to carry a complete system configuration (all your files, applications, your OS configuration, and all your settings) with you can be *very* useful.

      --
      Care about electronic freedom? Consider donating to the EFF!
    5. Re:??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it were a PC device that booted Linux via USB, you'd think it was cool...

      You're just jealous. :P

    6. Re:??? by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      Be bloody handy if you were in tech support and had to fix non-booting iMacs etc...

      Or if you where traveling. Just find a internet-cafe that has Macs, not too hard.

    7. Re:??? by jhoffoss · · Score: 2

      Agreed. Even just from a convenience standpoint (go to lan party at friends who has a few imacs around, plug, boot, go (assuming mac people have lan parties =)) From a System Support/HelpDesk standpoint, this could be pretty handy for fieldwork, too, at least in some rather rare situations. Pretty high geek factor to this ability though.

      --
      Linux: The world's best text-adventure game.
  35. Re:why would you want this when you have the terap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Therapin: poor interface, huge
    iPod: Standard Apple quality interface, tiny, less expensive

    The ipod is REALLY small. Nobody seems to notice this since most pics of it have nothing to show scale. It is about the size of a small deck of cards. It's impossible to sell a device that small for less than Apple is. The hd itself costs $399 retail. The ipod is smaller than a handspring. Did I mention that it's small?

  36. C|Net's on CRACK by cygnus · · Score: 4, Funny
    Both devices have a U.S. trademark and are not the only ones with that honor. Women's shoe brand Nine West also has a trademark on Treo for use "in the field of shoes and of accessories, namely handbags, belts and hosiery," according to the Patent and Trademark Office's Web site.

    There have been other Treos in the past as well. Treo, with a long vowel mark over the "e," as Handspring uses it, was trademarked at one time for use as a pesticide, although that mark is no longer active. And, in the 1960s, Treo was trademarked as the name for "soap impregnated in paper tissues for general household cleaning purposes."

    errr, thanks C|Net. that's what i go to your site to learn about. expired trademarks in the fields of pesticides and women's shoes.

    --
    Just raise the taxes on crack.
    1. Re:C|Net's on CRACK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and then there are Oreos

    2. Re:C|Net's on CRACK by Carl+Drougge · · Score: 1

      And then there are headache pills called Treo.. At least in sweden. (Yeah, very on topic..)

  37. Another Reason To Crit. "Good Morning, America" by Lethyos · · Score: 2

    See first hand this woman's opinion of the Good Morning, America TV program. I think most /. readers will find her reasons difficult to dismiss.

    --
    Why bother.
  38. Um, drive size? by autopr0n · · Score: 2

    There's a bit more to it then just har hard drive, you know. For one thing these come with a 2.5'' inch drive rather then a 3.5'' drive. A standard size HD is a bit large for me to carry around.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Um, drive size? by Wells2k · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's only a 2.5" drive on these things, but most of laptops that are coming out these days have at least a 20gb harddrive in them, and when I order new drives for laptops, I never go smaller than a 40gb drive.

      You would think that they could simply go with a nice large capacity drive in the first place and be done with it.

  39. Thank you for reiterating apples marketing for us. by autopr0n · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I especially liked the way you didn't ad any new info, because you know, I hadn't heard how the iPod was a revolutionary device and all that, and how it was so much radically better then other mp3 players because you could boot your Mac off of it a bazillion times already.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  40. How much time do you have? by MacGod · · Score: 3, Informative

    10GB=8.589935e+10 bits (assuming they're using 1024MB/GB not 100 to inflate the numbers). USB=12mbps=1.258291e+07bits/sec. Assuming this device completely saturates the USB port (it won't), that will take (8.59e+10)/(1.26e+07)=6826.668 seconds=1.89 hours. That seems like a long time to me. the iPod downloads its 5 gigs (yes, only 5, not 10) in ten minutes or so. Yeah, it's $150 more, but that's a big time difference

    --
    "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    1. Re:How much time do you have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That means that it costs about .70 cents per minute saved to get an iPod. I think it's worth it.

    2. Re:How much time do you have? by swb · · Score: 1

      This is the (8.59e+10)/(1.26e+07)th post I've seen that makes a claim at how slow the USB connection of this thing is relative to the fireware.

      BFD.

      The three regular Slashdot posters who brag about their 320kbps, 50 gig MP3 collections never go out of the house to begin with, so it doesn't affect them.

      The rest of us with vanilla ol' 128k MP3 files (3.2G/955 files if du and find are to be believed) would transfer them all over maybe once and then be done with it except for periodic updates. That "big time difference" is a one-time setup if you bother transfering everything at once. The futzing involved in incrementally changing the portable's content is likely to be as time consuming as the actual transfer itself.

      Anyway, the point is that bitching about USB is kind of stupid -- nobody is going to be dumping an entirely new 10G collection on this with any frequency, and even a signficant sync is likely to be completed in minutes not hours.

    3. Re:How much time do you have? by MacGod · · Score: 1

      Maybe your collection is only 3.2GB (mine's about that size as well). But if that's the case, what is the advantage of 10GB? Part of it is for using the device as an external hard drive, right? In which case, large file transfers would be much more common and more speed very helpful. And furthermore, you say that each synch would be minutes not hours. Well, why not make it seconds, not minutes?

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    4. Re:How much time do you have? by Simon+Peters · · Score: 1

      I use a lot of other people's computers, and my work machine. None of these have got a firewire port on them, so it's all very well saying it only takes x seconds to do this or that, in portability terms it's not much use if over 90% of the machines you use aren't able to connect to it.

    5. Re:How much time do you have? by swb · · Score: 1

      Well, why not make it seconds, not minutes?

      For the same reason you don't fly the Concorde from New York to Philadelphia. It's just not important enough.

  41. Not to be confused with... by tswinzig · · Score: 1, Redundant

    ...Handspring's Treo. (The logo even has a flat line over the 'e' indicating a long 'e' sound.)

    I'm sure lawyers will not be involved in this.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
  42. wait for commodity production, always a winner by Erris · · Score: 2
    Yeah, yeah, yeah. Price is often more a funtion of hype then anything else. Sure, they may not last. Ten years later your typical $100 gadget can be found selling for $3 at a garage sale. My brother in law got burn by minidisk. He bought early and expensive. The anti-skip was inadequate for jogging and the software was all crippled with Sony DAT type "you can't do what you want" stuff. Huh. I waited for normal CD players to support MP3 for cheap. I can jog with mine.

    I'm not that bright, however. I'm still suffering with LAME and NotLame notcompiles and I don't know how to write to my CD player with Linux. Because of that, I don't consider any of these things "PC" compatible. They are M$ compatible, the best example of overpriced hype that won't be here ten years from now.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
    1. Re:wait for commodity production, always a winner by shepd · · Score: 1

      >I'm still suffering with LAME and NotLame notcompiles and I don't know how to write to my CD player with Linux.

      Email me and I can (try to) help you with that.

      My email user name is: realuzer
      Me email server is: hotmail.com

      Piece it together. :-)

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  43. What a rip off... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MIRACL sounds like the damn death star. Next thing you know i'll be a freakin Jedi Knight...

  44. Don't you mean Steve 'Ballmer' ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    But it doesn't have Steve Jobs behind it, jumping up and down.

    Steve Jobs doesn't really jump up and down, he more of smirks. Don't get your Steve's confused: http://www.ntk.net/ballmer/mirrors.html

  45. iPod User's Opinion by MBCook · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Well, I'll tell you all what I think. First of all I want to mention that my brother owns an iPod and i've used it a little. I use PCs almost exclusivly (the only Mac I have runs Linux 24/7) for about 10 years.

    First I'll tell you guys the positives as I see them. The cost is a major factor. Like many people I can't drop more than maybe $50 at the drop of a hat, so the lower the price the better. The fact that for the lower price, you get 2x the storage is great also. The Treo is 2.5 cents per meg, while the iPod is 8 cents. That plus the fact that it works with Windows out of the box will probably give it very good sales. This is also good because USB is quite ubiqutous, unlike FireWire. The last good point that I'd like to touch on is the fact that it only has enough memory for 8 minutes of continuous playback. I have to say that I can't think of any way to use a MP3 player that would be so abusive that it would not be able to read a few megs off of a hard drive every few minutes. Are people planning on settings their MP3 players on those paint mixer things at hardware stores that shake paint cans like mad? Also, it's a serious bonus not to have to buy a Mac or some piece of software to be able to use my new MP3 player; of course if you already have a Mac, that's not a problem.

    Now the cons, once again as I see them. Firs the iPod is tiny and has a great UI. The jog dial works extreemly well, and with the exception that it took me a few seconds to figure out how to force it to turn off (hold pause, didn't take long ;), the controlls are perfect and obvious. I think that while USB is good, they should have included USB 2.0 for a number of reasons:

    • USB 2.0 is backwards compatible, so as more computers get USB 2, more people will get faster transfer rates. Let's face it, transfering 10 gigs at USB 1.x speeds would be mind-numbingly slow
    • FireWire is just too rare (in the wintel arena anyway) to be able to ship and expect good sales without bundeling a FireWire card with the product, IMHO
    • USB 2.0 is supposed to be faster than FireWire (or at least the current implementation of FireWire as seen on a Mac I could go out and buy today, correct?), so if USB 2 was availible you could transfer files to the Treo faster than the iPod
    The computer interface isn't the only problem that I see. First of all the Treo looks physically bigger than an iPod. I understand that it would have to be a tad bigger to hold twice as much storage, but it looks quite a bit wider, which is my complaint. The interface doesn't look nearly as good as the iPod. I don't think that the buttons could beat that slick jog dial. Now if they were to include (at least as an option) a little LCD/remote on a headphone cable like many CD players have these days, something that I think should have been offered on the iPod, that could make up for it easy. The battery life is another problem. If all your songs were encoded at 128kbps, then the Treo should only be able to play about 3.5% of it's capacity without having to recharge. While the iPod holds less, it will let you play 12% of it's capacity without having to recharge. This seems quite significant to me. The last major issue that I can say without haveing used a Treo is that it just doesn't look as cool as the iPod. If there is anything that the iMac taught us (other than how much the industry loves playing "Me too!" with ideas that become annoying fast and last TOO long), it's that sex sells. Let's face it, the average joe prefers something that looks stylish (the iMac) to something that looks like a box (average no-name PC of years ago).

    Well, those are my thoughts. I'd love to do a better in-depth comparison, so you guys feel free to send me any MP3 player (or anything else ;) that you want. My e-mail address is above! All in all I must say that for me, there is no contest that I would have to go with the iPod.

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    1. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      USB 2.0 is supposed to be faster than FireWire (or at least the current implementation of FireWire as seen on a Mac I could go out and buy today, correct?), so if USB 2 was availible you could transfer files to the Treo faster than the iPod

      Wrong. USB 2.0 is still crippled by the vagaries of the USB protocol, and so you should not expect more than 300 Mb/s on your 480 Mb/s bus. And that's with one device. Plug in a keyboard or a mouse, and you're down to 250 Mb/s. USB sucks.

    2. Re:iPod User's Opinion by jroller · · Score: 1

      With firewire cards running around 30 bucks for a nice 3 channel (linux compatible) card, I can't understand why anyone is afraid of it. Holy crap. Buy a freakin firewire card already!

    3. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Redundant

      The cost is a major factor. Like many people I can't drop more than maybe $50 at the drop of a hat, so the lower the price the better. The fact that for the lower price, you get 2x the storage is great also.


      Cost is an issue. However, the higher transfer rates, better interface, smaller size etc. definitely make the iPod more appealing.

      The Treo is 2.5 cents per meg, while the iPod is 8 cents.

      Ah, but how much data can you transfer to the device in half an hour?

      That plus the fact that it works with Windows out of the box will probably give it very good sales.

      It would be nice if the iPod had at least limited Windows support. However, since most PCs don't have FireWire anyway, the software support isn't a really high priority.

      This is also good because USB is quite ubiqutous, unlike FireWire.

      FireWire is quite ubiquitous on Macs and Sony Vaios.

      The last good point that I'd like to touch on is the fact that it only has enough memory for 8 minutes of continuous playback. I have to say that I can't think of any way to use a MP3 player that would be so abusive that it would not be able to read a few megs off of a hard drive every few minutes. Are people planning on settings their MP3 players on those paint mixer things at hardware stores that shake paint cans like mad?

      No, but if you load 20 minutes of music into RAM and spin down the hard drive, I bet you can really save on batteries.

      Also, it's a serious bonus not to have to buy a Mac or some piece of software to be able to use my new MP3 player; of course if you already have a Mac, that's not a problem.

      Exactly. And, you should buy a Mac anyway, not just because of the iPod. ;-)

      I think that while USB is good, they should have included USB 2.0 for a number of reasons:

      USB 2.0 would have been more expensive to use, probably run hotter and use more battery power (just a guess) compared to USB 1.1. Since nobody has USB 2.0 support right now (I remember hearing Windows XP doesn't have USB 2.0 support), there is no benefit to anyone right now, a possible benefit to a handful of people later, and obvious drawbacks.

      USB 2.0 is backwards compatible, so as more computers get USB 2, more people will get faster transfer rates. Let's face it, transfering 10 gigs at USB 1.x speeds would be mind-numbingly slow

      Yes, and that's exactly what the Treó does.

      FireWire is just too rare (in the wintel arena anyway) to be able to ship and expect good sales without bundeling a FireWire card with the product, IMHO

      FireWire is less rare than USB 2.0.

      USB 2.0 is supposed to be faster than FireWire (or at least the current implementation of FireWire as seen on a Mac I could go out and buy today, correct?), so if USB 2 was availible you could transfer files to the Treo faster than the iPod

      I don't recall what USB 2.0 is supposed to run at, but I think it's comparable to FireWire. That's why they're working on GigaWire or whatever it's called, which might be available before USB 2 (I really haven't been paying attention).

      blah, that's enough from me.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    4. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have to say that I can't think of any way to use a MP3 player that would be so abusive that it would not be able to read a few megs off of a hard drive every few minutes. "

      Ever heard of working out??? Or riding a Vespa to work everyday (after all my segway hasnt arrived yet)?? GO OUTSIDE

      "FireWire is just too rare (in the wintel arena anyway)"

      Keep in mind this is Apple. They invented firewire (IEEE 1394). It has shipped on EVERY computer they have sold in the past 2 years. This is a product for mac users and by restricting it to mac's, apple is trying to lure more wintel users to mac.

      "I understand that it would have to be a tad bigger to hold twice as much storage"

      It would have to be MUCH larger. it uses a standard 10gb ATA laptop drive. Apple uses a tiny and expensive toshiba drive (the largest they make that small is 5gb). If youve never seen an iPod IRL they are very small.

      Your USB 2.0 Comments:

      USB 2 is competition to Apple's firewire. They ignore it on their platform currently. A few 3rd party companies make cards and drivers but Apple has never put it on any of their hardware so that would restrict their own hardware from using it.

      "remote on a headphone cable like many CD players have"

      The sound out jack on the iPod have prongs that resemble the same prongs found on cd players that do support that type of wired remote. Putting the iPod in Diagnostic mode also shows a test labeled "REMOTE" and fails when you run it. Maybe apple will offer it as an add-on?

    5. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IMHO I also think the iPod is a cool toy to have. My primary complaint about the device is the lack of a graphic equalizer. I would have been happy if it had one without presets. You can set the equalizer setting for a song in iTunes but that assumes that you listening environment is always the same and I find that it just isn't so.
      The firmware in the iPod is upgradable so one can only hope Apple in their infinate wisdom will release and fireware with such functionality.
      Now I will agree with everyone that 20GB is better that 10GB but then again that is still alot of music. And as expressed by alot of iPod users you don't really use it all for music but more as a portable data device. I also agree that that while Firewire is still not as common on Wintel boxen as USB 1.x is. The Speed gain offered by Firewire is definately worth the investment. If you can afford the iPod you can spend the money on a host bus adapter. Assuming you have an available slot to install the card into. (Speed is not the only gain of Firewire the fact that you can have multiple hosts connected to the same Firewire chain is a nice feature)
      I think the designers of Treo expect the users if their device to only be pushing a few songs at a time. They probably assume that you can wait on the that very slow initial upload into the device.

      As for the operating systems supported by the iPod and iTunes software, I am sure that before long there will be a freeware utility for just about any operating system that will allow the user to read and write to the device. There already exists software for MS-DOS,Win32 and Linux that will allow you to read and write to HFS volumes. And as HFS not HFS+ is the standard currently used by the iPod I would almost gamble to say that it could be once a "frontend" has been added to it.

      Just my 2 cents worth

    6. Re:iPod User's Opinion by gleam · · Score: 3, Insightful

      people keep talking about the transfer rate.

      who cares?

      You really have more than 10 gigs of music that you listen to regularly? I mean, at 74 minutes per album and 192kbit, that's 96 albums, and a mind-numbing 118 hours of music.

      I have an archos jukebox 6000, which has a 6 gig hard drive and connects via USB, and can also function as a USB hard drive. So yes, it took about 80-90 minutes to fill up the hard drive initially. But, uh, I haven't transferred any files to or from it since then.

      Why would I?

      That's about 57 albums worth of music, and I guarantee you I don't listen to more than that regularly.

      The only point at which the transfer rate really becomes an issue is if you're actually using it as a portable hard drive, and I think a relatively small number of customers use it for that purpose.

      And do you want to know *why* the people who buy these rarely use it as a hard drive? Because people who buy $200-400 hard-drive based mp3 players usually have fairly new cd burners.

      I have a 16x cd burner, which will burn an entire 700mb cd in maybe 4.5 minutes. Which doesn't require me to make space on my mp3 player, and doesn't require me to bring it to someone who has a usb or firewire enabled system, etc etc.

      Seriously.

      If you have one of these things, you know you don't use it as a portable hard drive. It's an mp3 player, first and foremost.

      of course, if you have one of these kinds of things and you find you regularly *do* do file transfers, feel free to flame away.

      -gleam

      --
      this .sig is not a .sig.
    7. Re:iPod User's Opinion by mbourgon · · Score: 2
      Couple points

      1. I have a car MP3 player. I have 12 CDs in the car, and it's not enough. It gives me the ability to pick and choose on the fly what I want to listen to. Not in the mood for acoustic death metal today? No problem.
      2. I brought 20 CDs to work today. I'll listen to half of them, and change the CDs tonight. I go through 50 CDs a week, and it'll still take me MONTHS to go through my collection. I'm serious about music.
      3. all that being said, you do have a valid point. Say it does take 3 hours. Once a week, and that's not bad. It's not an iPod, but we're PC users, and used to not getting the coolest stuff. We're okay with that, it's cheaper to get a Treo. All that being said, if someone wanted to buy me an iPod, I'll be all over it. I really have no interest in a Treo; the music management doesn't seem to be done as well as the iPod. However, for people who're considering buying a 128 mb player, this thing is far superior. And for about the same price. I wouldn't buy a Nomad (too damn big, currently), but this I could see.
      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    8. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Smurf · · Score: 1
      1. I have an archos jukebox 6000, which has a 6 gig hard drive and connects via USB, and can also function as a USB hard drive. So yes, it took about 80-90 minutes to fill up the hard drive initially. But, uh, I haven't transferred any files to or from it since then.

        Why would I?

      If your Archos Jukebox 6000 can function as an external hard drive you would probably want to use it to backup your imporant files (and some not-so-important but HUGE files such as 700 MB movies). Or you could use it to transfer lots of huge files between computers that are too far away to connect directly.

      In my opinion the iPod is not a portable MP3 player. It's a cool self-powered 2.5" Firewire drive that can be recharged trhough the FW cable and that hapens to play MP3's nicely.

    9. Re:iPod User's Opinion by gleam · · Score: 2

      the archos doesn't quite compare to the ipod in terms of size, but it is by no means bulky... it also costs about $200-220, only slightly more than the nomad.

      size specs on the archos:

      Dimensions: 115 x 82 x 34mm (4.5" x 3.2" x 1.3")
      Weight: 290g (12 oz.)

      size specs on the ipod:

      Height: 4.02 inches (102 mm)
      Width: 2.43 inches (61.8 mm)
      Depth: 0.78 inches (19.9 mm)
      Weight: 6.5 ounces (185 g)

      weighs half as much, which is impressive, but otherwise is very similar in terms of actual volume.

      and at twice the price for a gig less storage, and given how i use my portable mp3 players (i don't jog with them), the extra 6oz doesn't bother me.

      again, i love the way the ipod looks, it looks like a perfectly great mp3 player, but I don't think the notion regarding transfer rate is really valid for the vast majority of its users.

      but yes, i agree there are exceptions :)

      you might be interested to know that it's fairly easy to upgrade the archos jukebox.. just plop in a new 2.5" hard drive and away you go. people have upgraded theirs to 40gb, so that'd be a nice 450 albums, or so...

      -gleam

      --
      this .sig is not a .sig.
    10. Re:iPod User's Opinion by gleam · · Score: 2

      if i wanna transfer a movie i burn it to a cd :P takes 4 minutes, permanent, doesn't require deletion from my jukebox

      besides, most of my movies are already burned to cd :)

      -gleam, who is ogling the UPS truck outside his house..

      --
      this .sig is not a .sig.
    11. Re:iPod User's Opinion by Smurf · · Score: 1

      1.12 times higher x 1.32 times wider x 1.7 times deeper = around 2.5 times in volume.

      According to your numbers, the Archos is noticeably bigger than the iPod in terms of volume, mainly because it's almost twice as deep. No wonder it's almost twice as heavy.

    12. Re:iPod User's Opinion by gleam · · Score: 2

      yeah, but it won't look twice as big ;)

      point taken, though.

      i think a chunk of the thickness of the archos is the neoprene bumpers, which add about a half-inch, I think.. they're those blue things on the corners that act as shock absorbers should you drop it..

      -gleam

      --
      this .sig is not a .sig.
    13. Re:iPod User's Opinion by epepke · · Score: 1

      The drive in the iPod is so thin that it's incredible that they could even fit a motor in there. It's a rectangle that just fits in the case but not much thicker than a stack of a few credit cards.

      I know it wouldn't be a terribly good engineering decision to have more than one drive in the device, because of the extra electronics and the need for the software to handle multiple volumes, but physically, they could do it and only need to make it about 5mm thicker.

      The battery is about the same shape as the disk drive, but a bit thinner. The high surface area probably explains the excellent recharge performance.

  46. Why Music Match? by Matey-O · · Score: 1

    Am I the only person that thinks Music Match sucks? (From freeware experience and my RCA Lyra...don't get me STARTED on the Lyra.)

    --
    "Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
    1. Re:Why Music Match? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, i'm with you. winmx and winamp for me.

    2. Re:Why Music Match? by Control-Z · · Score: 1
      I don't think it's too bad. I registered it.

      The main problem I have with it is how long it takes to scan for new songs among my 2,000+ MP3s. And it seems to take a LOT of CPU, even on my 1.1GHZ.

  47. What? by sulli · · Score: 5, Funny

    No "Buy one now at ThinkGeek" link? You guys are slipping.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
    1. Re:What? by Syberghost · · Score: 2

      No "Buy one now at ThinkGeek" link? You guys are slipping.

      That probably has less to do with Slashdot slipping, and more to do with the fact that Thinkgeek doesn't carry them...

  48. Re:iPAQ or any Pocket PC 2002 and iPlay best of al by Computer+suck! · · Score: 0

    the iPAQ comes with a 10G drive?

  49. Agreed, Vaios break often by zilym · · Score: 2

    About a month after the one year warranty period, my Vaio's plastic case cracked in one corner. Not too big a deal as everything is still working, just annoying to look at. Another couple months later and a small subset of the keys on the keyboard stop responding. Okay, got on Sony's factory support and ordered a new plastic plate and keyboard (at a cost of $250 total or so).

    Works great for another couple months, then one of the hinges for the display snaps clean off. Bleh! At this point, I wish I had just bought a new Thinkpad when my keyboard broke instead of sinking more money into repairing my stinkin Vaio.

    1. Re:Agreed, Vaios break often by linzeal · · Score: 1

      I just wish they had Ti Cases to switch out with the plastic crap. I had an old 150mhz one and the frigging video memory in the bottom fell out 2 times before I duct taped the fucker. Good thing I worked for Fry's that summer and got a sweet deal on the Break the thing and we'll take it back thingiee. Is there something wrong with a nice brushed Al case anything but cheap plastic plus you get a faraday cage for free, if you know what I mean ;)

  50. MD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In all fairness, 'early and expensive' in MD terms would be 1993 and 800$US for the MZ-1, which indeed might not have had the best anti-shock system. I have a MZ-1. Still use it in my system, the battery has long ago died.
    The latest MD gear needs a full-on epileptic fit to skip. And battery life is GREAT. And the media is cheap.
    And I don't know either how to write to a CD player. Do you mean sending commands?

  51. USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by yerricde · · Score: 2

    and uses a much slower USB connection instead of FireWire.

    USB 1.x can pump 1.2 megabytes per second (12 megabits, divided by 10 bits per byte counting comms overhead). That's the same as an 8x CD-ROM, or 50x realtime for a 192 kbps MP3. That's only five or six seconds per song. How is this slow for incrementally changing what's on your device when you get a new CD? Can't you spare one minute to copy the new album that you picked up at Best Buy to the device?

    USB 2.x, on the other hand, is about as fast as a FireWire brand IEEE-1394 connection.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      USB 1.x can pump 1.2 megabytes per second

      Then why can't you burn at 8x over USB? Because USB sucks. Good luck getting 4x. USB can do about 700 KB/s, if only one device is on the bus.

    2. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by omega9 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      [Read the whole thing before you mod me Offtopic.]

      Burning CDs, just like pretty much everything else, requires overhead. The pipe might be technically big enough to move that ammount of data but you still have to consider that error checking, device I/O, and other things have bandwidth needs as well. Similarly, your new ATA100 hard drive will never be able to move files at peak speed because of the overhead related to it.

      It doesn't "suck", it's just the way it is. USB was not invented as a means specifically for CD-RWs. Notice that the U stands for Universal. Manufacturers just realized that there may be some people that would be willing to trade speed for USB's ease of use. Saying it sucks is like bitching that you can't burn at 24X over COM1. A comparative list of speeds can be found here if you're interested.

      Back on topic: This is where the iPod has everthing else out there beat hands down. Even this new Treo has some nice features but it's still USB. But does it really matter? Yes, when you first load it it'll be a pain in the arse, but after you've cleared that hurdle I don't believe you'll be sitting for hours waiting to update it. A CD with ~12 songs encoded at 128k takes up ~40M. USB tops out at 1.5MB/s. Including the afformentioned overhead, you're still only looking at 1 minute per CD. Why is it we all act like we're so important that we can't wait that long?

      Agreed, it is sexy that the iPod can move files like lightning, but how long do you think it will be untill someone wises up and makes a firewire MP3 player for PCs?

      --
      I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.
    3. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to take a look at this. 8x CD-RW over USB.

    4. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It doesn't "suck", it's just the way it is...

      It is of course not possible to argue with the second part of this statement, but I take issue with the first.

      Saying it sucks is like bitching that you can't burn at 24X over COM1.

      No, it's different. What sucks about USB is that it does everything that IEEE 1394 does, but a little worse. Obviously, the bandwidth is bad. I say this because it's too fast for keyboards, and too slow for scanners or mass storage devices. But look what we have on it: scanners and keyboards. And mass storage devices.

      COM1 knew its role, and USB doesn't. Also of note, USB does not do peer-to-peer, but its popularity means that we get all kinds of multifunction devices running on it that don't work well.

    5. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by mlk · · Score: 1

      Alas thats only the theoritical(sp) max.

      USB 2 is between 380 and 480. Last time I check it was TBE.

      mlk

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    6. Re:USB may be slower but isn't all that slow by mlk · · Score: 1

      USB knows it's roll, to replace COM/LPT/any other standard ports on the back of yr PC.
      Firewire/iLink/IEEE1394 is to replace extern scsii and expenive(and cheep) multimedia cards[1].

      Mlk

      [1] That said, to do any real Video Editing you normally need a hardware toy too do it at any sort of speed...

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  52. big deal there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER... by Archfeld · · Score: 3, Flamebait

    The nomad 20 GB is $349, less the twice the price for more than TWICE the storage....The only thing is it takes 2 bloody hours to fill up my 6GB nomad via USB so this thing is gonna be a nightmare...Apple has it right with FireWire...

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  53. Let me spell it out for you by fireboy1919 · · Score: 0, Troll

    It seems that perhaps the moderator who posted my comment as "offtopic" has a little difficulty with the whole "reading" thing. Those examples that I gave were to illustrate the point, not to just spout stuff.

    Let me explain my message. I gave some examples of reviews that weren't worth making, specifically picking things that don't have very many features. For example, a shoe, for the most part, is a shoe. There isn't a lot to say about it - its only features are comfort, durability and style. Also, there are LOTS of shoes.

    So...my point was that when the only features are harddrive size, PC interface, and cost, what's the point of making a review? Its about the same as reviewing shoes, or hamburgers, or laptops brands (not actually the laptops themselves).

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    1. Re:Let me spell it out for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people have no power in their daily lives, and therefore take out their frustrations by moderating /. It seems you have been a victim of such a loser. My condolences. And a big "fuck you!" to the pathetic excuse for a human being that moderated your posts.

  54. A Cheaper Substitute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Slashdot users are looking for a substitute of expensive portable music players, perhaps they should look into the iPod LC. It is really a bargin compared to the $250 Treo and the $400 iPod.

  55. yeah, but can you play breakout on it? by arson1 · · Score: 1

    yeah, but can you play breakout on it? Well, can ya? :)

    --


    --
    Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
  56. That's easy... by Cadre · · Score: 1

    Well if you have a really customized OS you can just toss it on the iPod and take it to any Mac and be right at home.

    Especially useful for those at college who hate how some Mac labs may be locked down with software. Again, just plug in and boot your own setup.

    Also - it's not like this feature was in the requirements doc for the iPod. It's just an added bonus of Firewire.

    --
    All editorial writers ever do is come down from the hill after the battle is over and shoot the wounded.
    1. Re:That's easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehe...mac lab... you mean those two five-year-old machines sitting in the corner collecting dust and rarely being turned on other than out of curiosity? Few colleges I know of have any macs in the lab that are usable; I guess they're only there so the school can claim "Windows and Macintosh Computer labs!"

    2. Re:That's easy... by Jonny+290 · · Score: 1

      Well if you have a really customized OS you can just toss it on the iPod and take it to any Mac and be right at home.

      *any* Mac? I've got two macs, and i've tried to move the HD from one to another. Saw that fucker crash and BURN! But that's just my experience. It may work better on newer ones.

      Especially useful for those at college who hate how some Mac labs may be locked down with software. Again, just plug in and boot your own setup.

      Shhhhhhh...you're going to get the FBI to label iPods as terrorism devices!

      Self-booting storage device == circumvention of security policies == hacking tool == terrorist weapon!

      --
      Hey Taco! Looks like you're using the "infinite monkeys and typewriters" scheme to generate Ask Slashdots again...
    3. Re:That's easy... by autopr0n · · Score: 2

      Especially useful for those at college who hate how some Mac labs may be locked down with software. Again, just plug in and boot your own setup.

      Every locked down mac I've ever seen didn't allow external booting. For good reason.

      --
      autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    4. Re:That's easy... by gabebear · · Score: 1

      Well, you can generally not move backwards in OS numbers. When Apple ships a mac with MacOS 9.0 on it, that is the minimum it can boot, however all old PowerMacs can boot MacOS up to 9.1, booting OSX on old (pre-1999) macs just isn't that easy, but we are only talking about Macs with built in firewire.

      I've never had a problem when I swap HDs when going up in OS version, and I've swapped them out at least 6 times and created ASR images(like Norton's Ghost, but much better and free) for Macs in our school labs(mix of AIO G3s and G4s with a couple 6500s for good measure).

      Putting MacOS X or 9.22 on a drive and not having it boot off any Mac with a firewire port would be very odd.

    5. Re:That's easy... by gabebear · · Score: 1

      I setup Macs in labs at my school and I don't believe there is a way to disable external booting. I've never seen a mac with external booting disabled and I've worked with a lot of macs locked down in a variety of ways. The only real way to stop external booting is block access to the ports needed to hook up a drive(SCSI and firewire) but that obviously isn't what you were saying and again, I've rarely seen a setup where you couldn't reach the back of the computer.

    6. Re:That's easy... by sakusha · · Score: 2
      I setup Macs in labs at my school and I don't believe there is a way to disable external booting. I've never seen a mac with external booting disabled and I've worked with a lot of macs locked down in a variety of ways.

      No, it's easy to disable external booting. You can set a password in Open Firmware to prevent booting from any external device, or anything but a specified device without a password. It's customizable and your choice. Any Mac with Open Firmware can do this. There are a couple of shareware gadgets to set passwords via a GUI, if you're squeamish about using the OF command line. The only way to reset the machine without the password is to reset OF by removing RAM and OF will reset when it detects the changed configuration. So all you have to do is install the password and keep the CPU cabinets locked, and you're secure.
  57. HD based MP3 unit online chart [iPod focus] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check this link. pls.

    The iPod Comparison Chart ...for details of other hard drive based MP3 players. This page is iPod-centric, and attempts to compare it to similar devices on the market.

    I still can't understand why anyone would invest 15 hours in loading a USB device....

    1. Re:HD based MP3 unit online chart [iPod focus] by MinusOne · · Score: 2

      > I still can't understand why anyone would invest 15 hours in loading a USB device....

      I have invested at least this much time, I guess, because I have about 20GB of songs on my upgraded 30 GB Archos. The thing is that I only invested maybe five minutes at a time, over a period of about 4 months. The reason I hacked it up to 30GB was so that it would be a download-once operation - I don't need to constantly shuffle what is on the toy because it has *everything*. My entire CD collection, plus what I have managed to pirate off of friends.

  58. there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER...and slower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    15 hours to load up via USB is a joke. These things have been in development, and they are trying to sell as many as they can before the axe falls...which will be very soon. FireWire is the way.

  59. 3000 songs? by dsfox · · Score: 2, Funny

    Is this the new unit of storage measurement? Will we soon see 50 megasong drives from Seagate? What if songs start getting longer again?

  60. Re:why would you want this when you have the terap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because perhaps one wants a player that isn't a pain in the ass to carry around? Sorry, the 7" x 3.2" x 1" dimensions just don't cut it.

  61. are you kidding? by crayz · · Score: 1

    My 5200/75LC was the suckiest piece of suck ever created. And OS X 10.0 was pretty god-awful too. I still use Macs.

    The fact that is has 10GB of storage isn't the disadvantage. The fact that transferring files to/from it would take probably 20x longer than to an iPod is.

    1. Re:are you kidding? by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      My 5200/75LC was the suckiest piece of suck ever created.

      Geeze. I mean, no argument that the 5200 was pretty much Apple's low-water mark for desktop machines, but that's like complaining that you bought a Yugo. It's not like it got any good reviews ever.

      Count your blessings. You could have bought an Exploding PowerBook 5300.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  62. Re:HIT THE LIGHTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can you do Enter the Sandman tomorrow? or maybe Ride the Lightning?

  63. USB 2 even less common than Firewire by SideshowBob · · Score: 1

    Firewire is standard on all Macs and Sony Vaios, and is available on one or more models from several other PC manufacturers.

    How many users out there have a machine with USB 2?

  64. "Yesterday's technology tomorrow... only worse". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    15 hours to upload is ok with you? Really? How is this 'not a disastor'?

    To attempt the theoretical speed of USB2, you will not be able to share the circuit with an USB devices, or the slower components will rule.

    Read here why USB2 is a fraud:

    http://www.mackido.com/Hardware/USB2.html

    And don't forget that 1394b is right around the corner.

    "Give it another 6 months to a year (when FireWire is at 800 Mbps), and the requirements and design will be done for USB 2.0 -- another 6 month to a year, and the first versions might be leaking out -- and another 1 - 2 years to get all the bugs and kinks worked out (changes impact reliability) -- then another 2 - 3 years to get everyone using the higher speed versions of USB (if ever)."

    Intel is re-inventing Firewire under the guise of upgrading USB...it's too little, too late.

  65. Not just Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Phoenix Technologies has shown Windows boxen booting from Firewire drives. Depending on whether or not one can format the drive in the iPod into FAT (and have the iPod's OS not complain) you could probably boot a Windows box also...

  66. no buffer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no buffer? this thing will skip like a six year old girl.

    1. Re:no buffer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The e.Digital (OTCBB:EDIG) state of the art MicroOS based reference design is 2nd to NONE!! I might also add that their stock is trading a low and is a STEAL at these levels. Now that the Treo is out this baby's gonna skyrocket!! Don't be left on the sidelines - e.Digital is for REAL!!

  67. Wow, that was a useless article. by mbourgon · · Score: 2

    Read the blurb, that's all the comparison is. What a waste of bytes; the submitter summed up in 3 lines what it took the whole page on CNet.

    --
    "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
  68. Re:big deal there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER.. by dknj · · Score: 1

    Its taking me 8 hours+ to transfer 10.5gb of mp3s over a 10BaseT link to my machine at work. Screw you and die :(

    -dk

  69. Real life USB performance by janolder · · Score: 2, Interesting
    A year ago, I designed a controller board that takes USB 1.1 as input among other things. The board uses the ScanLogic SL11R USB/RISC controller that implements most of the USB protocol in hardware.

    Sadly, the overhead of USB is quite dramatic, bulk packets are 64 bytes max size. Blasting the board with bulk transfers from an Athlon 650, I could get between 860kb and 1.0MB/s into it - depending on the data. Due to bit-stuffing every six bits (this guarantees that the receiver can synthesize the clock from the data stream), the data rate is not constant. In real life it is probably closer to 1MB/s, though.

    Interestingly, similar experiments on a Mac showed dramatically worse performance, around 600kB/s. Our resident Mac guru says this is due to very poor implemention in the OS.

    Off-topic note to engineers: The part's DMA is broken and the manufacturer doesn't seem to want to rev the die.

    1. Re:Real life USB performance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't really care about USB v.s. FireWire or MP3 players or having lots of music available to me at any time, so I'm posting way down here so as not to annoy anyone.

      I do like warm breezes on spring days when there's still a chill in the air, and smells that bring back childhood memories. Could we have a story about these things?

  70. ARCHOS 20 GIG MP3 PLAYER!!!! by Jakobud · · Score: 2, Informative

    Geez people. 10 gig Treo??? 6 gig IPod???? Please people. Are you kidding me???? Get the freakin Archos 20 gig for only $330 at www.thinkgeek.com right now! Don't complain that it's only USB either. Yes USB is quite a bit slower than Firewire but please, it's not like your gonna suddenly decide to copy 10 gigs of music to your Archos all the sudden. I can't believe some people would actually sacrifice 300% more space just so the transfer speeds are faster.....IPod = dumb. 6 gigs is chunk change. And it's more expensive??!?? ha! My archos ownz the Ipod. Who cares how fast I can copy my 10 songs to my mp3 players. As long as it's not forever :)

    Jakobud

    1. Re:ARCHOS 20 GIG MP3 PLAYER!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes USB is quite a bit slower than Firewire but please, it's not like your gonna suddenly decide to copy 10 gigs of music to your Archos all the sudden.
      Not if I wanted to use it the same day I started transferring the files, no. But seriously, this comes up a lot - the iPod is a legitimate alternative to other portable firewire drives, whereas the archos is only good for music and only given that you don't want to swap out your songs very frequently and you don't mind having to wear cargo pants so it'll fit in a pocket. I like being able to listen to songs at full 44.1, 16 bit capacity and flip them out at anytime, being able to carry around the entire work codebase cvs archive to and from work and fit on whatever episodes of "TV Funhouse" or "Space Ghost:Coast to Coast" or music videos. All on an iPod, none of that on the Archos.

    2. Re:ARCHOS 20 GIG MP3 PLAYER!!!! by ndpatel · · Score: 1

      dude, taco, VA must be pretty hard up if you've got to go straight to the hard-sell.

      --
      london is drowning and i live by river
    3. Re:ARCHOS 20 GIG MP3 PLAYER!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is a classic case of MO' BETTER reasoning...since i got MO', it must somehow be better. the archos is nice, but you're kidding yourself if you think it compares in anything but capacity to the ipod. USB transfer is a dog and when you're copying gigs of data, speed matters.
      face it. the archos is larger, slower, less intuitive and you can't boot from it. archos may be 'MO, but it certainly isn't better.

  71. Unlike Firewire? too rare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying that Firewire is not as 'common' as USB is like saying Perrier is not as common as tap water. It costs more, for starters.

    You're behind the curve, that's the issue. The hump in front of you keeps you from seeing things clearly, thats all.

    You get what you pay for, and you obviously can't afford to pay for much. It's called a 'beer budget', and if you can't afford better, no one owes you the difference. Your obsession with fantasy is blocking reality, me thinks. USB2 is not here now...is it? USB devices will slow a USB2 connection, right? USB2 is an Intel fantasy, and one that will never come about. There is a valid reason that you don't see USB2 on this device....they don't see it as reality either.

    Firewire is well accepted...see Apple, Sony, Kodak etc.

  72. Re:3000 Songs!? That's nothing by freeweed · · Score: 2
    Before I stopped purchasing music (read: new stuff sucking), I had amassed over 300 cd's alone. This was on top of the 200 or so cassettes that I owned, bought before I owned a CD player, and very few of these duplicated each other. I stopped buying music around age 23 or so. At that point I 'owned' over 5000 songs alone (500 albums * 10 songs average per).


    If I were to have continued to purchase music, with the money I have these days, I'd be well over 10,000 songs. And I'm damn picky in terms of what I like. If 3,000 songs seems like a lot, you have very, very select tastes in music, or not much money.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  73. Re:big deal there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER.. by linzeal · · Score: 1
    Um, at work?!?! Where I used to work when the network activity had sent the 5th megabyte of anything with mp3 in it I would of been on your ass like the old testament God on the heathens.

    Jesus h christ have some fucking respect for the people you work with. You brought the whole network to a crawl for what ??? Don't they have IDS where you work I mean fuck I hate people that do that. Burn the damn things to cds and get a cd wallet. Do not put a damn mp3 on the machine so people like me can get reemed because some fuck is serving mp3/divx and porn with windows file sharing. This is not a frigging bazaar for you to hawk your stolen mp3s omg I'm ranting sorry.

  74. Cheap portable mass storage by Daniel+Rutter · · Score: 5, Informative
    If it's just the storage you're after, not the MP3 playing, I coincidentally just put up a review of a couple of external boxes that accept a 2.5 inch laptop drive (not really tiny, but not really expensive either...) which both have USB 1.1 and IEEE-1394 connectivity. One of them's pocketable, one of them's bigger and looks like a 3.5 inch drive, for no very good reason. They both let you get 20Gb of decently fast storage (as long as you use the FireWire port) for about half the price of a 5Gb iPod.

    Check it out.

  75. More Similar announcements. by freeweed · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    AMD released a new chip today that runs 5% faster than their old chips. It sells for 2x the price of the next fastest chip.


    I dunno, something that has twice the storage for half the price (well almost) ... works out to be 4x the deal by my math (if these are the stats you care about, like I do). Compared to the much-touted ipod, I'd say this is one hell of an accomplishment.


    Let's see regular 4x performance increased in CPU power for the same cost, and then I may agree with you. Until then, your point makes little sense.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    1. Re:More Similar announcements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, 2x capacity is nothing special. The iPod wasn't over generous with the space and storage is cheap.

      This isn't anything special.

      A bigmac and large fries please.

    2. Re:More Similar announcements. by singularity · · Score: 1

      What about this: Suppose someone announced a CPU running at 2x the mHz, but was only running at about 75% of the currently shipping CPUs?

      There are factors that have to be taken into consideration other than capacity and price.

      The way I look at is this: For the extra money for the iPod, you get things like a smaller size, a nicer interface, better uses (being able to use it to transfer data files, to boot from, etc.), and better sync'ing with Macs (the intended audience).

      Once you factor these things in, the iPod is a good deal.

      If all you want to go on is storage capactiy and price, the Treo is a good deal. By that rational, though, you could just get an older laptop and throw a 60 gig hard drive into it. Then you get 12x the capacity of the iPod. But I would not like to lug that around with me on the train.

      Despite being a Mac guy, I bought a Nike PSA-60 today. 32 megs for $80 minus a $50 mail-in rebate. Throw in an overly-expensive 64 meg MMC card, and I have a 96 meg MP3 player for under $100.

      Yes, I could get other MP3 players. But this one has a nice form factor and is small. Sometimes size is a concern.

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    3. Re:More Similar announcements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iPod is not a great deal. It's not even a great product. If it was made by some small Korean or German company it would have gone unnoticed - but the cult of Apple KNOWS it's best, just because it is from Apple. And so we have to put up with the gushing while they try again to win converts to their religion.

    4. Re:More Similar announcements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't care what you have to say, loser. Go sell some more NIKEs.

  76. Re:why would you want this when you have the terap by zaren · · Score: 1

    Why?

    A) the Terapin is larger than an iPod
    2) it's more expensive than an iPod
    III) It's uglier than an iPod
    d) It's got no Mac support, unlike an iPod

    Admittedly, it's got some extra nifty cool features, but how many mp3 players do you need that have video out or PCMCIA slots? And to think, it's been marked down to just $130 MORE than an iPod...

    --
    Come to the University of Mars! Classes starting soon!
  77. half the ram, half the batter life by ddent · · Score: 2

    Notice the corelation? Silly design move. If they had more ram (so cheap right now too) it wouldn't have to access the HDD as often. Thus, the battery would last longer. Oh well...

  78. Look similar?? by WiggyWack · · Score: 0

    "The Treo 10 is similar in appearance to the iPod but is somewhat larger." - cnet article

    What, they're both white and square?

    --
    Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
    1. Re:Look similar?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, they are both White, Square and have buttons dam thats like identical!

  79. need help - kinda OT by iPoding · · Score: 1
    We found some really interesting stings when we did a 'cat /iPod\ Updater\ 1.0/Contents/Resources/Firmware | strings | less'
    stuff like:
    Started CDRW Application
    Reading Track x: nKB Left
    Writing Track x...
    NO INTERVENTION
    NO MEDIA PRESENT
    MEDIA NOT BLANK
    ERROR WRITING TRACK
    ERROR READING TRACK
    ERROR CLOSING SESSION

    and a few model numbers of cdrw mechanisms from Teac and Plextor. Have been trying to get iPod to recognize a drive (wrong mech., but) plugged directly with no positive results. Would appreciate any advice or help in digging deeper into the firmware, identifying if these strings are just leftover remnants or if application still present.
    The iPod Updater 1.0 was pulled by Apple (hmm?) but is available elsewhere.

    hacks@TAKETHISOUT.ipoding.com

  80. What about battery life? by c=sixty4 · · Score: 1
    One thing that has reallt kept me from using this type of devices is that battery life tends to suck. One of the primary uses of portable music players for me is to have something to listen to while travelling. In that case, it doesn't matter if you have 150 hours of music on it - If you only have four hours of battery life, that's just four hours of music. Plus, if you're travelling to somewhere with different electrical standards from yours (doesn't even have to be across the Atlantic - plug shapes are different all across Europe) you're pretty much screwed unless you put in a new set of non-rechargable batteries every four hours.

    Until I can get reasonable battery life, I'm using my trusty Walkman. The sound quality sucks, yes, but if you're on a plane / on a train / in a car the noise from that tends to drown out the tape hiss.

    --
    "The good die first." "Most of us are morally ambiguous, which explains our random dying patterns." --- MST3K
  81. PowerMac 5200 Re:are you kidding? by foonf · · Score: 1
    Geeze. I mean, no argument that the 5200 was pretty much Apple's low-water mark for desktop machines, but that's like complaining that you bought a Yugo. It's not like it got any good reviews ever.


    Arrgh don't remind me of those accursed things! At my high school those things were all we had in the labs. Even the late-model 225 MHz ones* seemed terribly slow running Netscape to the 486/33 I had at home. And that was even taking into account the far better net connection at school!

    *-I don't believe those were actually sold at retail, they were only available to gullible school districts.
    --

    "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
  82. All my mp3..... by xinit · · Score: 1

    I love their claims that this way I can "literally" put my whole mp3 collection in my pocket. I have roughly a 100 GB of mp3 files... so would I need to buy 10 of these things and then some massively over-pocketed cargo pants? Or does this thing come with those as features too?

    --
    --- http://foo.ca
  83. What about the ability to sync with iTunes? by amichalo · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I am the odd man out, but I find that the iPod's ability to sync an entire music library, as well as play lists, between portable device and desktop/laptop is just as much a 'breakthrough' as 10 hours of battery life on a device so small and light.

    I would like to know if this new device offers some synchronization scheme or is the poor user doomed to dealing with 10 GB of long file names to figure out if their entire music library was coming with them on a trip. (God be with them if they decided to wipe the 10GB drive and copy their entire collection over from scratch just to be sure - how long would that take over USB?)

    --
    I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
  84. Forget about the Nomad? by Fishy · · Score: 1

    Just grap a 6Gb NJB, and slip a 40Gb disk in it.

    Game Over.

    To say that, the NJB is very nice, but its getting old now, and its replacement is due very soon. It makes me wonder why this crap Treo player made it onto slashdot, maybe 2-3 years ago it might have been news, now its just old kit.

    F

  85. truth in advertizing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about not telling me how many songs it can hold... I'll be the judge of that.

    Just listing the hard drive size would be fine. After all, we're geeks, we know what bit rate we like our music digitized at and we're more than capable of making the space/time/quality trade-off for ourselves.

  86. Useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Twice the disk space and no Firewire. Genius PC people.

  87. Twice the storage, almost half the price... by the_furies · · Score: 1

    ...and it's Windows compatible! Yeeess! Three for three! Once again a superior device is released that reveals an Apple device to be the glitzy, overpriced chunk of geek-toy crap it really is.

    1. Re:Twice the storage, almost half the price... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're being sarcastic, right?

  88. Re:The Linux Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Truly inspired! Although I've now lost my appetite for breakfast...

  89. Portable Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I've already got the latest version of my personalized Linux distro running on this with everything I need to run MY version on any computer I sit down at. I've fitted it to connect via PCI, USB, and Firewire to any machine that accepts these.

    See, it really is better than that Jobs-the third-Hitler-built-stinking-filthy-damn-dirty-ape iPod that I can't afford because then I have to buy a nice OSX equipped Mac and I'm broke...

    the horror . . . the horror . . .

  90. Good Apple, bad copy by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I don't have the extra cash to go out and pick up an iPod I've got to play with a couple of them. They are pretty fucking cool. The screen isn't some POS ordered out of a RadioShack catalog, the battery life is long because they don't use standard batteries, and they are really compact. They're geared toward Mac users and people pissed off that they only work with iTunes don't seem to grasp that most shit is ONLY Windows compatible and most of the time Mac users are SOL when it comes to new toys. As for a new iPod-ish device coming out with more space yet less actual capability that doesn't mean much. Storage space on portables isn't such a big deal since there's no way you could listen to the thousands of songs you can carry on the battery supply you've got available. However you might want to make your portable your main MP3 storage device in which case you're actually limited by space but also connection speed. USB is not going to cut it for this sort of task. Having 10GB would be a plus but the fact it would take you forever to fill up the drive is a definite minus. Now if this thing had the same capabilities as an iPod with a groovy screen for half as much money I'd be impressed. You get what you pay for though. Ask Nomad owners who bought their deck six months ago and are STILL waiting for their MP3 collection to upload to it.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  91. Re:there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER...and slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's slow, but so what.. you only need to do it once... Unless you have more than 3000 songs!

  92. Portable Mass Storage Device? by Shade,+The · · Score: 1

    A portable device for storing mass?

    Isn't that called a box?

  93. Re:why would you want this when you have the terap by Emil+Brink · · Score: 2
    Geez, some people are just too ignorant to talk geeky hardware, it seems! If you'd taken the time to make the link clickable and read the goddamned specs for that device, you would have seen that it uses 10 Mbps Ethernet. Now, two things should have stricken you:
    • OMG, 10 Mbps is even less than the 12 Mbps of (theoretical) USB peak bandwidth!
    • OMG, 10 Mbps is 1/40:th of the (again, theoretical) FireWire/IEEE1394/i.Link peak bandwidth of 400 Mbps!!
    Taken together, these two facts might make you think that ThinkGeek's device, while possibly cool, does not beat the iPod when it comes to bandwidth, and in fact doesn't even beat the Treo. Clear? With that said, I must say the TV output is kind of a cool feature. ;^)
    --
    main(O){10<putchar(4^--O?77-(15&5128 >>4*O):10)&&main(2+O);}
  94. More MP3 players and more "locked" CDs by HuskyDog · · Score: 2
    Don't we live in interesting times. One group of companies are hard at work making better and cheaper MP3 players which they sell with "easy to use CD ripping software" whilst another group and working equally hard to make it impossible to rip CDs. Sooner or later these two groups are going to bump into each other with one almighty BANG.

    I think that we can safely say that when they do collide they will stitch up some deal which results in the consumer being screwed over.

    BTW, does anyone know if you can buy a portable OGG player yet? Perhaps someone could come up with a firmware patch for one of these things which would add that feature.

  95. FireWire wrong size on Vaios by extra88 · · Score: 1

    Sony Vaios and an increasing number of other laptops (Dells) have IEEE 1394 aka FireWire ports *but* they are 4 pin ports unlike Apple laptops' and iPod 6 pin ports. You need the 6 pin port for the iPod's cool feature of being able to recharge through FireWire. Plus, the FireWire cable doubles as the cable to connect to the iPod's wall wart when you want to use that! How cool is that?

    So those laptops could have the fast transfer but not the recharge. And if an mp3 player *does* come with USB2, will it be able to recharge over that connection? I know USB can carry power but I don't think it's spec'ed to carry enough to do a recharge in a reasonable amount of time.

    It seems a lot of people overlook this extra feature of FireWire. It's less of an issue for geeks but for most people, anything which means one less wire on their desk, one less wall wart, is a good thing.

  96. What I want by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2

    Is a jukebox that has ethernet, and uses something like smb, or tftp to put stuff on/delete from it. I'd like the artist/album/song data to simply come from the filenames (ie, directory structure). Nothing else. Just a KISS mp3 player that is easy to put stuff on, remove stuff from, and organize.

    1. Re:What I want by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2

      Let me rephrase that. I want a *portable* mp3 jukebox that has those two things. I've already written my own daemon for here at home that accomplishes the task. It uses your choice of named pipe (great for web interface on the same box) or sockets (remote control...is there anybody out there who would like to help write a palm-pilot interface?)

  97. Genica Roopaq by The+Evil+Dwarf+from · · Score: 1

    I picked up a MP3 jukebox called the Roopaq a week ago. It doesn't come with a disk drive so I bought a 30G fujitsu drive. It uses USB to connect to the system, which manages a decent sustained 1M/second download. The main problem is that the battery life is only a couple of hours. I am currently looking for a larger battery as it seems to use a commodity Li-Ion module.
    Now I have to get over the second "problem", I only have 5G left on it. Ahh the mp3 freedom of hundreds of CDs worth of music. (now if I can just get my unix server to correctly recognixe the drive format I'll be a happy camper...)
    (Oh yeah.. cost $275 including $140 for the drive)

    1. Re:Genica Roopaq by Greedo · · Score: 1

      I read the above post and did a bit of digging. One URL that has specs on the Roopaq is here.

      My thoughts ... I was one of the early buyers of the Genica MP3 CD player, and I have to say that their products are not too good:

      - the battery life is about 4 hours (3 trips to and from work for me)
      - the antishock is about 10sec, but kinda sporadic
      - equalizer only works for CDs, not MP3 CDs
      - the earbuds seriously suck
      - the earphone jack on the unit is sensitive to the direction the plug goes in (i.e., somethings probably loose inside already, and I don't jog with the thing)

      Why do I mention all this? Basically to warn people away from Genica's products. Sure, the Roopaq looks good at $110 or whatever. Keep in mind that on top of that you need to buy the harddrive. And new earphones.

      And who needs an "IR card-sized remote control" for a portable device? Sure, I'll walk around in public, clicking a remote at my pants. I won't look strange at all.

      Caveat emptor ...

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
  98. 8000 songs. by eclectric · · Score: 1

    I won't be happy until it can hold 8000 songs. That's the size of my current mp3 collections (all live recordings and my encoded CD collections.) I've stayed away from hard-drive based systems because I can't see constantly copying music to them. Of course, it's probably just as tedious to keep making new CD-RWs.

  99. Re: FireWire is not more expensive by poiu · · Score: 2, Insightful
    But most computers, nowadays, only have USB (mostly because of restrictive, expensive licensing on the part of Sony and *ahem* Apple).

    Beg Pardon??? Sure USB is more ubiquitous and that is a very good reason to choose to make a product based on it. But you should have stopped while you were ahead.

    That "expensive" license was only there for the first six months after Apple introduced Macs' with FireWire. After that, they dropped the price, check it out do a google search.

    Apple makes kick ass hardware, but also makes some stupid moves, but that wasn't one of them.

    --

    ---
    "Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate that."
  100. The power, the power! by zzyzx · · Score: 1

    People who are saying that the larger size of the drives doesn't matter if the battery life is shorter are missing the point. Even if you can only listen to 5 hours of music at a time, the power of having 300 hours of music at your fingertips is incredible.

    It's not just, "I'm going to listen to 300 hours of music." It's, "I'm going to listen to 5 hours of music, and I can choose so many options."

  101. LAME!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just thought I'd get to it before CMDR Taco does. Anything new sucks!

  102. No Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it is not Mac compatible, why would anyone want it?

  103. More Important Time Questions by dreadpiratemark · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While it's interesting to think about how long it takes to fill 10 gig via USB (short answer: overnight) that really isn't a big deal to me. Fine, I transfer your music one evening & I have it from then on on the Treo. There are two bigger 'time' questions though, IMO.

    1) How long does it take to start playing from the moment I boot the machine (for reference, Creative Nomad Jukebox's take up to 50 seconds for an initial boot, check out News.Creative.Com - Products.Nomad and the comments there by Nomad owners & you'll see this is a common issue)?

    2) How long does it take for the Treo to shuffle from one track to another one? In other words, are there noticable delays between non-sequential tracks as the hard drive searches for the next song? This would also come into play if I searched for a song - how long will it take to find it?

    Anyway, I can live with a long process of transfering my music to the machine as it will only have to be done once (with periodic smaller updates as I get new music), but the other issues would affect me every time I try to play music...and would just be annoying.

    Just my .02 worth.

    -Mark

  104. Re:"Yesterday's technology tomorrow... only worse" by pivo · · Score: 1

    Actually, what would be cooler is a wireless link like my Lucent 802.3 card. Those ought to get pretty cheap soon. Then you could be downloading into your MP3 player as you were walking out the door with it.

  105. if you download DJ Sets... by Rai · · Score: 0

    then this is great. i have several dj sets ranging from a little over 60 mintues to a 2 part deep dish set that lasts over 4 1/2 hours. i could load up half of this thing in the first day.

  106. so you can only transfer with MusicMatch? by Rai · · Score: 0

    that sucks. there should be a driver to make windows recognize it as a removeable disk.

    and does it handle multiple directories and m3u playlists?

  107. sync speed by rodolfo.borges · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So much people complaining about the sync speed.. "takes n hours to fill 10Gb", etc..
    But that's just the first time you fill it.
    Other syncs will be much faster, because just the new (and modified) songs have to be copied, just like on a incremental backup.
    Of course, assuming that the software is not dumb..

  108. USB2? by MrResistor · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It doesn't say if it's USB 1 or 2. If it's USB2, then I'm excited, maybe even excited enough to buy one!

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  109. heh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and posting a response to notify everyone of this is even *less* newsworthy... *ahem*, sorry, *more* unnewsworthy!

  110. Re:big deal there is better, bigger, AND CHEAPER.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure every morning you swap 5GB into your ipod while you shower and thank god you have firewire. That makes you a freak. 99% of mp3 users can fit their entire collection onto a 10GB drive. That means they fill it up ONCE. The other 1% can leave 9GB of music they always listen to on the drive and swap out 1GB while they shower and think of how they'll spend the $150 they saved. Every moderator who helped this comment is a fucking retard.

  111. hard drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just note that the iPod (and the Archos I think) don't use the 2.5" drives but much smaller ones. Price difference between a 5GB 2.5" drive and the smaller ones is pretty dramatic - and understandable.

    1. Re:hard drive by Daniel+Rutter · · Score: 2

      Yes, I know about the 1.8 inch drives in the smaller storage widgets, including the iPod. I mention in my review that the whole iPod actually costs about the same as the higher retail prices for a drive like the one it contains :-).

  112. Or a beer-belly :) n/t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no text darn it.

  113. Feature? by xmda · · Score: 1

    So when did "Made in the USA" become a feature?

  114. USB 2 is royalty-free; FireWire is RAND by yerricde · · Score: 2

    No, it's different. What sucks about USB is that it does everything that IEEE 1394 does, but a little worse.

    And the cost per unit of USB hardware is much cheaper than that of 1394 hardware. The asymptotic law of hardware cost states that if you reduce the cost of one component or set of components that contributes say 3/4 of the cost of a device, you can't reduce the total cost lower than 1/4 of the original cost. USB and USB 2 are both licensed on a royalty-free relevant-patent-swap basis; 1394 requires payment of a 25c per device royalty. After three layers of markup (manufacturer, distributor, and dealer), this royalty can become significant.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  115. 5200. (OT) by saintlupus · · Score: 2

    My 5200/75LC was the suckiest piece of suck ever created.

    They're not always all that bad. Check out the HOWTO I wrote on making one useful.

    --saint

  116. also: Why is skip protection measured in minutes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because tney want to mislead customers to improve sales.

    Along the same line, "why is skip protection measured in minutes?" is another question to raise. For example, the Rio Volt mp3cdplayer. It advertises as 8 minutes skip protection, but what they don't mention clearly is that unit is for extremely low quality WMA files, while mp3s will skip very frequently. Another misleading advertisement is that their battery lasts for 8 hours, when in fact it lasts only 4 hours with practical use. There should be a standard way of evaluating products to cut through the advertising bullshit.

  117. xplay... by zonker · · Score: 0

    Just thought you might want to keep an eye on XPlay by MediaFour. It's a Windows Ipod package... Here's the link:

    http://www.mediafour.com/products/xpod/