Associated Press Not Impressed By MyFi
prostoalex writes "Michael Regan from the Associated Press started reviewing MyFi, a portable satellite radio receiver, by treating it as a competitor to iPod, but then admitted the two devices are quite different. For $350 and a $10-a-month subscription the buyer gets access to XM satellite radio stations and ability to record the stream to 128 MB of built-in flash. There's no way to transfer the recorded content to the computer or vice versa. The review recommends waiting for lower price and better features."
Wow, that's hundreds of people... all not impressed.
An mp3 player is quite different from a sattelite radio reciever!
In any urban area, the number and variety of free radio stations (supported by volunteers or commercial sponsors) is staggering. There really isn't any reason to splurge on an expensive device when a twist of the dial can tune in just about any type of music that an individual would be interested in. If you can't find a station that interests you in those areas, perhaps it's time to turn the radio off altogether.
Soviet Russia jokes are soooooooo 2003. You gotta go with the in Korea jokes.
In Korea, satellite radio is for old people!
As a XM user I am drooling over the features offered by this device. I owend a first generation sony PNP and now an XM Roady. This device is light years ahead of the first generation. Comparing this to a I-Pod or MP3 player confuses what the device is. It more correct to compare this to a tivo with cable.
The review recommends waiting for lower price and better features.
So when is the right time to buy if people take this kind of recommendation seriously?
Price will be lower than the lower price you saw yesterday, features will be better than the better features you thought that are already better.
Rock that crushes, Paper & Scissors that don't matter.
>There's no way to transfer the recorded content to >the computer or vice versa.
Except to connect the headphone jack to your linein. Why is the analog solution usually overlooked so quickly?
not yet, that is...
Anyone seen my jagged little pill?
...you BOTH FAIL IT! Netcraft will confirm it: MyFi is ALREADY dying...
viva the hammer!
--;
Sirius play more "hits" while XM has more of a diverse playlist.
I prefer XM myself.
roche
Bah Humbug!
PARENT POST TUBGIRL
the original MyFI by http://neurosaudio.com is amazing. instead of xm, i can broadcast my ogg collection to any station i want! way better than xm radio...
Plus XM has Opie and Anthony on channel 202 who may be the best talk radio show on the radio now. they are awesome and put on a great show. XM is a superior service from what i have heard. I have a friend who has sirius in his car, but i like XM better. Both put FM stations to shame
I'm a fan of non-commercial radio myself.
Only old people eat dogs in Korea.
Except in order to get Opie and Anthony you have to pay a monthly fee of $1.99 per radio in ADDITION to the monthly fee.
Random notes:
Everyone keeps saying the iPOD holds more music, has better battery life. I don't seem them competing. Maybe it's just me. The limitations of satellite radio mean you have to have an antenna and specialized hardware that sucks the juice down. But you get a 2,000,000 song library.
You can record and playback, and it has an alarm. It also comes with a home and car kit. Note that buying a SkyFi2, home, and car kit will almost cost as much as the MyFi.
I have the MyFi so I can listen while I'm walking my dog. Yes, I like XM that much to want to listen to it over MP3s or something like that. One thing your MP3 collection can't do is turn you on to new music. I wouldn't have known about many new bands (or old bands for that matter) without XM. I don't know if I would know who Muse, The Faint, or Franz Ferdinand were, and I wouldn't have found out how much I like Echo and the Bunnymen and stuff like that.
I don't think it needs more storage space. The idea is to listen to radio, which is mostly live. I think the recorded feature is for programs you can't pick up when you aren't available (a timer feature will record something for you) and if you can't pick up a signal. It's basically 5 hours of music programming.
Did I mention the talk radio and the ACC/Big 10/Pac-10 games?
I like not having to cue up playlists, pick what I want to listen to, listen to new music, etc. XM seems to want to play their deeper library more than Sirius, one reason I like their service more.
I've had it for 2 days and like it. I need to play with the wearable antenna some more before I say I love it. The signal is spotty outside at times while walking around. I have no problems in my car or at the office. Speaking as someone who is upgrading from the original Sony Xm radio, this is also a huge upgrade.
Finally, to the editors, stop knocking XM an satellite radio. Half the satellite radio stories seem to denounce it somehow. The AP review doesn't really say anything bad about it. Some of you that knock satellite radio need to try it before worshiping your iPOD again.
Because its a senseless limitation. Digital > Analog > Digital from a digital device? Its also needlessly lossy, but I think inconvenience is probably the main one.
Quack, quack.
Personally, I am hitting the wife up for one of these at Christmas.
We have XM in her Honda Accord, and I fell in love with it from the beginning.
I winced a bit at the price, but that's why they call it the cutting edge I guess.
It would have been nice to have a bit more feedback and testing concerning the unit's performance. Battery life figures, sound quality review, and some more extensive reception stats would probably convince many 'on the fence" purchasers.
Me, I am sold. I will grab one at a box store so I will have a store manager to harass if these things turn out to be duds. 350 bucks is a lot to shell out for a conversation piece and an "Assume Bundy XM listening position" exercise in antennae positioning.
Internet radio will kill everything else
There is no sig
Then don't buy it retard.
O&A the best? best at coming up with unoriginal shit maybe =)
... another additional fee w/XM
...
Stern's show, OTOH, will be included in the monthly fee, along with being able to listen to a stream over the net
I have XM now, but am planning on getting new stuff for xmas (by way of selling my xmpcr for a highly marked up price)
also, sirius has 3 satellites vs xm's 2. both use repeaters, so same difference
AM and FM are so out of business in 5 years. i've driven to lake tahoe and denver (from phoenix), and with satellite radio, it was nice. if i didn't have it, i would have gone nuts
vodka, straight up, thank you!
Had Sirius, now with XM. Why? Because (a) Sirius is stuck on endless self-promotion. Why do they keep advertising their own service on their own channels? Christ, you have to already be a subscriber to listen. (b) They have a less variety of music channels than XM - compare the lists of music offerings between the two and you'll see what I mean. (c) Sirius would rather spend its money on stupid jocks than decent music - yes now we get all those NFL games. Great. In the meantime good luck finding a good punk station, ska station, whatever-your-taste-is station.
What does Sirius have going for it? NPR. But in the music genre, they are far behind XM in my opinion.
On my MyFi satellite radio... MyFi was found dead at it's home this evening.
How clueless are you, Chevy is GM. Furthermore nearly all car companies are going with XM, the only one that i can think of right away that is with Sirius is Ford.
quick! Old people in Korea are Modding on /.!!!!!!
Raise the --; flag!, the time is NOW!
They have been trying to get XM ro remove the fee. Anthony made a post about it today over at wackbag.com
roche
Bah Humbug!
Just because you live in NYC doesn't mean that anyone anywhere else has more than one decent station. And frankly, I'd rather do without radio than live near fucks like you.
of a captive audiance, once again media outlets are using thier money and reach to completely control what people (at least that segment that listen to radio) hear. One source one view one world.
"It's so convenient to have a system where everyone is a criminal" - A. Hitler
Combine satellite radio reception with an iPod and you'd really have something! Much cooler and more useful than the much-rumored "video iPod". Of course, there might be licensing issues with this idea as well: will satellite radio services be upset if their broadcasts are recorded and saved?
Q: What does the "B." in Benoit B. Mandelbrot stand for? A: Benoit B. Mandelbrot
If XM sold these units to every single one of their subscribers and nobody else, this unit is a failure.
XM's real value will be growing the supplier base, and this device is designed to do that. I'd say it's competing more in the "portable music" segment then the "satellite radio delivery options" segment, although there is of course overlap there.
But yes, I do think for a lot of consumers that are considering digital music--especially those considering these devices as gift options this holiday seasion--this device would be compared to the ipod mini.
even with the additional fee, it is still cheaper per month than sirius
you spend how much to get access to music played by 90% of FM radio stations?? bah! TripleJ FM and web cast, ROX! www.triplej.net.au
There was an unknown error in the submission.
Actually there are a lot more than just Ford http://sirius.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=S irius/CachedPage&c=Gateway&cid=10668573982 86
The reason for the $350 price tag is that you not only get the receiver, but the vehicle kit, home kit, rechargeable battery, headphones, antennas and more. If you compare that to the cost of the SkyFi2 ($100), home kit ($50), car kit ($50), and the boom box ($100); I think for $50 more the portability and convenience of recording up to 5 hours of programming justifies the cost.
XM has exclusive arrangements with Honda and GM, while Sirius has exclusive deals with Ford and Daimler/Chrysler (including Mercedes). BMW is effectively exclusive to Sirius (albeit not contractually). Toyota's still a tossup, and it looks like Nissan will split between the two.
One thing your MP3 collection can't do is turn you on to new music.
What about using your ISP's news server, binaries newsgroups and a good reader like GrabIt??
Newsgroups are sorted by genre... I've discovered LOTS of music, some I knew of but just overlooked as a kid.
can someone please tell me how xm radio knows you have a subscribtion or not, i dont see how it works since its one way wireless...
I expect that toyota will go XM, seeing as how GM owns them.
Didn't anyone learn from Sony's spectacular failure that people will not buy DRM-crippled crap?
To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
Silly thought but...
How about a wifi enabled version, that tunes into internet radio stations automatically?
That is something that I would consider buying.
Apples and oranges. MP3 players are fairly mature tech compared to sat. radio. http://http//profiles.myspace.com/users/5194587
Please bring back the XMPCR, so that I can actually have MyFi, my way.
Linux at home
After I posted that last message, I realized that someone is sure to think I meant that we should have a wifi version of the portable satellite radio receiver system, including the car kit etc.
What I was actually thinking was more along the line of a MP3 player with a wifi reciever built in, that could save internet radio tunes to flash media.
http://profiles.myspace.com/users/5194587 Apples and oranges! MP3 is mature tech compared to sat radio.
It would be like comparing VCR players to HD TV. Yeah, both play video, but they are much different.
Hey meathead,
GM OWNS CHEVY, VOLVO, BUICK, HUMMER, PONTIAC AND CADILLAC......
Your cred. has just sunk through the floor, thanks for trying....
There's no way to transfer the recorded content to the computer or vice versa....YET!!!
won't be too long now..
The review was fairly positive if you ask me.
As to people who can't understand pay radio, it is a disease called "closed mindedness" and you've got it.
I have no idea what you're talking about. Please enlighten me as to the connection between sat radio and media control of what people hear. If someone willingly pays a subscription fee to have sat radio, how can they be considered a captive audience?
Can they do some sort of content-on-demand? You can save the song on your ipod, but it automatically deletes after a few days... unless you pay $.99, in which case you've bought it! Ipod gets synced with your computer anyway; that would give an opportunity for the device to contact Xm and complete the purchase. No need to transfer the data again. Think of the music marketing opportunities! If content owners have a shred of sense, they'd jump at the opportunity. Oh, that's the rub, isn't it...
When Satellite Radio (SDARS) first hit the market, I was among those who swore up and down that I would never pay a subscription for radio service. Radio service, one of the easiest obtainable free services around, was fine the way it was.
It stayed that way until I happened to see a good deal on a receiver and decided that I would go ahead and give it a try, subscription numbers were growing (although this was still while XM was sub-1,000,000) and popularity was increasing. It was one of those things, I had no idea what I was missing until I gave it a try.
That was about 2 years ago. I am now paying about $25/month for SDARS, as I subscribe both to Sirius and XM and pay the premium fee for Opie & Anthony on XM. The commercial free music is great; the sound quality is superb and the list of choices is endless. I can drive cross-country listening only to music that I enjoy and without commercials with runtime longer than the songs. Although I rarely listened to broadcast radio opting instead for CDs, that has completely turned around and I find that I rarely listen to CDs and even listen to SDARS over watching TV or Movies a lot of the time.
If I am out of the house all day, I can get my fill of FoxNews, MSNBC, or CNN. The Right-Wing and Left-Wing channels offered by each service allow me to see each viewpoint as harshly as those contesting it feel when it comes to political issues.
You don't know what you're missing till you try it... As for the MyFI specifically, yes it would be nice but not for the price they want. You can get a receiver, car kit, and home kit all for about $100-120 after rebate or using Friends & Family promos. I would really like a MyFI, but will not be getting one until the price comes WAY down or there is a competing product with a much lower price.
GM does not own Toyota.
They have had assorted corporate arrangements in the past but neither one owns the other.
Besides, why bother owning when you can do nice cooperative things like NUMMI?
This thing isn't perfect. Hell, the first personal computers (as we would recognize them today) were heavy, loud, ugly, and could barely calculate a square root. I won't buy this thing, but I will step back and recognize that it's a pretty extraordinary little device: a Walkman-sized box that receives significant and complex information from satellites floating way up in space. Think about that in the context of, say, 1960 ... or 1980. GPS does, broadly, the same thing, but think about how much more limited the bandwidth requirements are for a GPS unit.
Absolutely amazing.
And here's why:
1. No commercials on music channels. EVER. Never have had them. XM had to change from commercials to non commercial BECAUSE Sirius wouldn't air commercials.
2. Lee Abrams.
Lee Abrams runs the programming at XM. He is the architect of Clear Channel's "cookie cutter" formats.
3. Cost.
XM is $9.99 a month.
But you don't get:
1. All the channels (some are premium)
2. Internet streaming access (costs you $5 a month extra)
3. No discounts offered if you pay annually OR add other receivers to your account.
Sirius is $12.95 (or $9.95 if you pay annually)
For EVERYTHING.
No wonder Sirius is the service that TALENT seems to be gravitating to. Such as Mel Karmazin. Howard Stern.
Corporatism != Free Market
But what does it really matter? How often do people buy new cars, once every five years or more? Are you going to choose a car brand based on which radio it offers? I wouldn't.
It's much cheaper and easier to buy a new aftermarket radio when you want one, and there are plenty of choices for XM or Sirius and some radios that will accept tuner add-ons for either one.
Not RF but actual preconfigured prewired connections.
Plus you can get WMA and MP3 playback. I don't even want to know what a car dealer would charge for that.
All of this stuff is MUCH cheaper through Crutchfield than going through a car dealer. Hell, even Circuit Shity will sell you a decent aftermarket radio and install it for less than one new car loan payment. Definitely the way to go.
October 23, 2001, regarding the iPod:
No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.
November 30, 2004, regarding MyFi:
There's no way to transfer the recorded content to the computer or vice versa.
I'll wait on this one.
Sirius seems to have better sound quality, IMO. Even my mom (an XM subscriber) commented on how my satellite radio got better "reception" than hers.
Sirius beats XM for political talk: they have an uncut Air America stream, and their own Sirius Left (with my pals The Young Turks), as well as two conservative talk streams. XM has one conservative and one liberal stream, and their "America Left" is just Air America with some shows replaced by non-AAR shows.
They have some big names behind their shows, including Eminem and Tony Hawk. DJ Liquid Todd has a weekly show on Alt Nation and helped put together the electronic streams Boombox and Chill. I'm sure XM has some of these too.
Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
I'm just waiting for the price to come down a bit, and someone to come up with a hacked way to transfer music from the built in memory to a computer. Then I can download all the music I want off of my MyFi radio.
If you can read this then I forgot to check "Post Anonymously"
I can't say any more. allofmp3.com will provide you a cheap source of music, and then you can program days and days of music so you can workout till your heart explodes.
You're mistaking Saab and Volvo. Volvo is owned by Ford, Saab by GM.
GM also owns Daewoo and Saturn, and has shares in Isuzu and Subaru. You're right on the other brands, though.
(not counting Holden, which is only available in Autralia, Opel in continental Europe and Vauxhall in the British Isles).
Seems that it's about time for the industries (home electronics, tech/computing and music) to wake up and smell the fact that Apple owns their sorry butts as far as portable music players goes. It's time to stop trying to bring them down and start trying to figure out how to play nice with the new standard... ie, the iPod. Like it or not.
--jd
"So when is the right time to buy if people take this kind of recommendation seriously?"
When the price is lower and they add more features?
There are times when a device costs too much or is too new to be taken seriously.
What's he's giving is called "advice".
Or do you think advice should consist of "Gee, this costs too much and the features aren't there, but buy it anyway to encourage the company to do better"?
That's the reason why Apple Fan-b0yZ are made fun of around here; they have the same exact mentality.
Both XM and Sirius do some serious compression to their music.
You get used to it after a while, but at first, its a tough listen.
But satellite radio is "CD Quality" the way iTMS is "CD Quality": Only in the minds of the marketers.
Ah...
Here we go again, yet another attempt by companies to switch us all over to subscription models for everything. Every day another little scheme springs up until the day comes where everyone just expects "pay per play" to be the way things are.
"Softly, softly said the spider to the fly"
I for one have no interest, and will never buy, any entertainment device that either forces me to pay a subscription to continue to use it or, if it's capable of recording, dictates to me how I may make personal use of said recordings.
And yes that includes the iPod and it's ilk.
Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
Anybody know if this is possible, even with modified equipment?
a se_2001_05_08.html
I know the service is sold only to those in the US; however, news articles I read seem to indicate that it could be picked up (at least, at some point) from Perth:
http://www.xmradio.com/newsroom/screen/press_rele
I'm in Adelaide, FYI.
Did anyone else naively sign up to be notified of when pre-ordering would take place and then do it when it was available? I did and now I regret it.
I recieved noticed that pre-order was available on Nov 22nd and sent in my pre-order an hour later. By the next morning XM had already withdrawn the $100 "deposit". Now I see I could have picked one up at Best Buy on the 26th and saved myself the shipping. What's worse is that they haven't shipped my unit yet (at least, I haven't seen the final charge from my bank account) and the best I can find is "before December 24th".
I tried calling the phone number on the website but the best I could get was "you have to contact the website". WTF? Anyway, I emailed the website (would prefer a live body) on November 27th and have YET to get a reply.
I'm seriously considering moving to Sirius. Maybe they don't screw their loyal customers.
I've been saying this for a while now... if XM were to team up with Apple, it would be an unbeatable combination. An iPod w/ XM receiver built in, streaming XM via iTunes (instead of the popup flash/wmp solution they have now), the ability to "Buy this song now!" via iTMS while you're listening to it on the streaming station. Hell, even if you're on the go and hear a song you like on your iPod/XM device, have a "Buy this song next time the iPod is docked" option.
.//chris
But no, they went with Dell, and decided to put out their own device (which I'm still going to buy). Oh well, maybe next time.
I went to the grocery store yesterday. I was dying for an orange. So I grabbed an apple, bought it and took it home. Well, let me tell you, that apple tasted nothing like an orange! Nothing at all! So, I would have to suggest no one buy apples until the orange flavor improves.
--- Math illiteracy affects 8 out of every 5 people.
living in the NY Metro area I can say that NY radio is amongst the worst in the country and I have travelled by car thru 45 of the lower 48. The only redeeming stations are on AM - WFAN and the news channels.
Check out www.timetraxtech.com
I looked and looked and I went with sirius because they carry way more sports NFL , NHL(when it comes back) college stuff etc etc .
.. lets face it the majority of musicians ..not all, have like maybe 10 good songs the others not so good . Deepest playlists for me is not a selling feature but yet XM uses that as their selling feature and I don't want to have to listen to crap while finally getting to a song. XM has MLB ...whoppee!! I am huge baseball fan but the last thing I would do , is listen to a game on the radio. Hockey , Football ...way different more action. Maybe XM will start broadcasting golf tournaments.
Not to mention , the playlists
Anyway to each is own. XM Sirius choose what makes you happy, not based on playlists or user subscriptions.
I just read that Sirius has also bought the rights to the NCAA tournament this March, and the English Premier League for 3 years http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=42059
One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
Even in a major metropolitan area, the selection of FM stations can't come even close to comparing to XM.
I have a Roady (The Roady2 is $120 or so, same price I paid for my original Roady 9 months or so ago), and I LOVE it.
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
When you subscribe, you give them your Radio ID. (Basically a serial number for your radio.)
They then have the satellites periodically broadcast an "Activate radio ID xyz123" inside their data stream for a few hours/days. The radio is then activated.
When your sub runs out, they begin periodically broadcasting "Deactivate radio ID xyz123" messages for for at least a few months.
I've heard that a few people have been able to get free service by activating for a month, then cancelling and leaving the radio off for 5-6 months. Apparently the deactivation signals for any given radio are only sent for a few months. But it's a gamble - XM could send a deactivation signal again at any time.
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
A highly directional antenna pointed close to the horizon might be able to pull it off.
It definately won't work in your car.
Try www.worldspace.com - WorldSpace and XM used to be the same company (or one owned the other), now they are independent companies, although some of XM's programming is still done by WorldSpace. (For example, XM 82 - The System is a WorldSpace channel that XM carries.)
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
I can certainly see the usefulness of being able to record a few hours of XM programming for times when it is impossible to receive a good live satellite signal. But why the hell do you feel such a pressing need to record gigabytes of digital music from XM, anyway? Why not just turn it on and listen to the live stream, instead?
Do you also set up your TiVo to record your favorite hours of the Weather Channel?
And you do realize, of course, that for the price of that 40gig iPod that can hold perhaps 10,000 songs, you can get over three years of XM satellite radio service with their 2,000,000 title playlist, don't you?
I have both Sirius and XM...Yes, Sirius has better content in my opinion but it is not just music for sat radio...Sirius--All NFL games, All NBA games, SEC, Big 12 and Big 10 college football and basketball. XM-ALL MLB games, ACC, Pac 10 and Big 10 college football and basketball...plus other sports...ALL major cable news stations+financial etc, need a laugh--great comedy stations, old time radio stations--audio books, talk radio galore, etc. in regards to music... Sirius--like Elvis--an entire station---Frank Sinatra and friends--you got it--50+ music stations on each... You like Al Franken or Sean Hannity...
In regards to the Myfi...Here's the hype:
The World's First XM Portable
The Delphi XM MyFi(TM) is the world's first XM2go receiver -- a personal XM satellite radio. The MyFi includes everything you need to enjoy XM anywhere - in the home, in the car, and on the go.
Most of the complaints of the Myfi seem to be XM issues and not Myfi issues. It seems unreasonable to expect the Myfi to work with the internal antenna or attachable external antenna when your body or a building are in the way of a satellite or repeater. However, in Orlando over the holidays (I was visiting) I was able to receive a clear signal with the internal antenna just about everywhere in the house. The whole idea of sticking the myfi in your pocket and walking around anywhere and everywhere with a signal at all times is NOT what they have advertised.
Why would they provide an external antenna?
Why would they allow you to have 5 hours of saved programmed material when you can't receive a signal?
The Myfi works as advertised.
I don't think the $350 is unreasonable for what you receive--it has changed my life---I walk for an hour everyday listening to what I want--news, sports, music etc along the Florida Coast...what a device!!!!!!!!!
Unlike the Sirius XTR1 the Myfi does not heat up...
I have both Sirius and XM...Yes, Sirius has better content in my opinion but it is not just music for sat radio...Sirius--All NFL games, All NBA games, SEC, Big 12 and Big 10 college football and basketball. XM-ALL MLB games, ACC, Pac 10 and Big 10 college football and basketball...plus other sports...ALL major cable news stations+financial etc, need a laugh--great comedy stations, old time radio stations--audio books, talk radio galore, etc. in regards to music... Sirius--like Elvis--an entire station---Frank Sinatra and friends--you got it--50+ music stations on each... You like Al Franken or Sean Hannity...also, with the Myfi your individual stocks stream across the screen, or football, basketball, etc scores..
In regards to the Myfi...Here's the hype:
The World's First XM Portable
The Delphi XM MyFi(TM) is the world's first XM2go receiver -- a personal XM satellite radio. The MyFi includes everything you need to enjoy XM anywhere - in the home, in the car, and on the go.
Most of the complaints of the Myfi seem to be XM issues and not Myfi issues. It seems unreasonable to expect the Myfi to work with the internal antenna or attachable external antenna when your body or a building are in the way of a satellite or repeater. However, in Orlando over the holidays (I was visiting) I was able to receive a clear signal with the internal antenna just about everywhere in the house. The whole idea of sticking the myfi in your pocket and walking around anywhere and everywhere with a signal at all times is NOT what they have advertised.
Why would they provide an external antenna?
Why would they allow you to have 5 hours of saved programmed material when you can't receive a signal?
The Myfi works as advertised.
I don't think the $350 is unreasonable for what you receive--it has changed my life---driving 100 miles a day and I walk for an hour everyday listening to what I want--news, sports, music etc along the Florida Coast...what a device!!!!!!!!!
umm...its porn?