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Fourteen Digital Music Players Reviewed

prostoalex writes "The PC Magazine reviews 14 digital music players that can play MP3, WMA or AAC files. The editor's choice among the models compared includes Apple iPod Mini and iRiver iFP-390T. The editors decided to conduct a single review of both Flash- and HDD-based music players. Of special interest is the battery life test as well as sound quality test. Even though the entire article is published online in HTML, the summary of the features is available in PDF only."

13 of 497 comments (clear)

  1. I dont use apple earbuds with my ipod by ElGnomo · · Score: 5, Informative

    earbud quality != player sound quality

  2. Rio Karma is noteably absent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's a great player that competes in the same market as those test, and it plays Vorbis and FLAC.

  3. Karma has OGG by ponds · · Score: 4, Informative

    My Rio Karma is full of 20 GBs of ogg vorbis encoded lovin' .

    It has about 13 hours of battery life, and can talk by USB 2.0, USB 1.1, or even 100mbit ethernet. When I plug it into the ethernet, it runs a webserver with a java applet that allows you to send and receive software.

    It works on any operating system with a VM/java plugin without a hitch. I use it in Linux and didn't have to set up anythign when I got it.

    Don't know why they didnt review it...

  4. This beggars belief... by radish · · Score: 5, Informative


    They didn't even review the Rio Karma? Are they smoking something? If there's one player out there which has repeatedly been shown to be the genuine iPod beater it's the Karma, yet a supposedly "thorough" group test doesn't even mention it.

    For the uninitiated:

    * 16 hours battery life
    * 20gb capacity
    * Smaller than an iPod
    * Plays AAC, WMA, MP3, FLAC, OGG, and more (Audible coming soon)
    * Fully supports GAPLESS Vorbis, FLAC and mp3 playback. This is unique among portable players and a very big deal for a lot of people.
    * USB2.0 & Ethernet connectivity
    * Fully supported under Windows/Mac/Linux - works on any platform with Java & Ethernet
    * Best of class sound quality
    * Full 5-band parametric EQ
    * On the fly playlists, Rio DJ (randomisation, new tracks, old tracks, most played etc)
    * Crossfade between tracks
    * The thing just ROCKS

    I will be writing to the editor...

    --

    ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    1. Re:This beggars belief... by jkabbe · · Score: 5, Informative

      Smaller than an iPod

      If you're going to talk something up at least be correct.

      Karma: 2.7 * 3.0 * 1.1 = 8.91 cubic inches
      iPod: 4.1 * 2.4 * 0.62 = 6.1008 cubic inches

      If "size" = "height" then, yes, the Karma is smaller. However the iPod is smaller in the other two dimensions and smaller in overall volume. If Apple wanted the iPod to be 33% larger I am sure they could add more battery life too.

  5. Bah! by Espen · · Score: 5, Informative

    "iTunes is incapable of displaying file types"

    Give these guys a thesaurus! What do they think the "kind" column is for in "view options"?

    And is it really worth reading a review that sees anything worthwhile in: "The 3.4-ounce iPod Mini has more EQ selections than any other player"?

  6. What about the Neuros? by talexb · · Score: 4, Informative

    It seems odd that they didn't include a review of the Neuros Audio unit. I have the unit with the 20G hard drive, and although the firmware is a little wobbly, it's a great unit with a cool feature called HiSi, or "Hear it - See it" that lets you identify a song on the built-in radio or even on a P.A. system through the internal microphone.

  7. Dedicated software for iFP-390T? No! by 87C751 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The review lists "dedicated software" as a minus for the iRiver iFP-390T. Wrong! Here is the UMS update. My 390T looks just like a disk drive to my Gentoo box.

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  8. Holy Mary! by ilikejam · · Score: 4, Informative

    The frequency response curves on all those headphones is absolutely horrific!
    Do yourselves a favour - buy the cheapest player and get a pair of headphones for $30. It'll sound way better than anything with the supplied headphones.
    I think I'll be sticking with my 'old school' MiniDisc Walkman (and yes it is a Sony, so yes I can call it a Walkman) and my Grado SR60s. Mmmm. Expensive.

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  9. Re:Ogg Vorbis?Ogg Vorbis?Ogg Vorbis? by jd142 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not according to the email I just received from their Sales people. I've been in the market for a 256-512 meg flash based unit. Unfortunately, the Neuros only goes to 128. I emailed iRiver and their people said ogg support is not there for the flash players.

    If you want a hard drive ogg player, Neuros is the obvious solution. USB 2.0 in 20-80 gig models. Pick the storage you want. They've opened their sdk and they have the best customer service and response going. http://www.neurosaudio.com and browse the forums.

  10. Re:This might be off-topic by SydShamino · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is the Digisette, as another poster says.

    I have a Digisette DUO-DX AR-496 digital music player. It supports MP3 and WMA and AudioBook formats, though I've only used it with MP3. Note that it can also record MP3s on the fly, using an audio-in jack. Useful if you want a digital tape recorder in a pinch. It also has a headphone jack and sounds great as a stand-along portable player.

    It comes with built-in 96 MB flash memory. It has an expansion slot for an MMC upgrade. Note that the manual and website might just mention a 64 MB upgrade, but I -confirm- that it works with a 256 MB MMC. With about 350 MB of music on it now, I have more music than battery life (which is about 5 hours).

    I drive a convertible, and I would never consider putting a custom stereo into it. My wife has a nifty iPod, but her stereo retransmit thingy gets a lot of static, and the whole arrangement is much more cumbersome than a single unit I can drop into the built-in tape player. Despite what some reviews of the product have said, you can skip tracks without taking the thing out of the tape deck.

    While I would have tried a 512 MB MMC if I had found one, I think 256 MB were the largest made before the shift to SD whatever, which it does not support. I would eventually like more space than I have now, but it is perfectly usable as is for my commutes to and from work, with the nice variety of happy music I can sing to on a nice Spring drive in a convertible in Texas. It makes commuting fun. :)

    --
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  11. Missing choices - Rio Nitrus - Rio Anything by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 4, Informative
    They seem to have picked their winners and then picked some schlock for them to beat. To not even consider anything from Rio is idiotic. Several have mentioned the Karma. For flash players, the Cali has to be at least considered by anyone looking for one of these.

    I own a Rio Nitrus. Some of the things I like about it are:
    • Form factor - size and weight of a large binder clip.
    • Excellent sound quality.
    • Genuine 16+ hour battery life.
    • 1.5 GB capacity.
    • 5 band equalizer with presets and customizing.
    • Easy to use controls, menus, and backlit display.
    --
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  12. The picked the wrong iRiver, too. by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Informative
    My iRiver IHP-120 holds 20GB, connects via USB 2.0, mounts as a filesystem and lets you organize your MP3s using the filesystem (unlike the Karma, which wants you to use its software), plays OGG, gets 12-14hrs battery life, is just a hair larger than the iPod and the same weight. Plus it has an FM tuner for those days you want to listen to NPR, and it records -- either to MP3 on the fly, or to 44KHz uncompressed WAV. And it has optical in and out.

    Choosing between it and the Karma was tough for me, but I decided the iRiver had cooler features and was just a hair more open; not to mention that iRiver has a good track record for upgrades. They've publicly announced fixes for some problems with shuffle and playlist creation that should arrive in May, and by June the IHP series should have gapless playback like the Karma.

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