Sony Ericsson Announces First Walkman Phone
jonknee writes "Sony Ericsson has announced the first in a new line of self-described "Walkman phones" that specialize in playing music. The W800i features a 512MB memory card to store tunes and up to 30 hours of playback (if you keep the phone off, otherwise about half that). We should see a Motorola phone with iTunes onboard within the next two weeks, making March the month of music phones."
How many "all on one" devices do consumers really need?
On another note... haven't there been phones like this before? What's their claim to being the first?
http://tinyurl.com/6vq2z/
Everythign is getting so small now, tiny phones, tiny mp3 players, tiny cameras. It is not that difficult to get each device seperate. I hate this trend towards convergence because you end up with a crappy phone and a crappy mp3 player. I bought one of those phone/pda things and it was terrible. It wasn't half as good as my regular PDA or the phone I traded it in for. So instead i get two crappy devices in the size of one.
Focus on making things better, making phone reception clearer, i don't need to listen to music using my phone, thats what my iPod is for.
Be better in bed. Wikiafterdark!
Lessee, it's a Sony digital music format, so it'll be all fucked up. 1. Memory Stick? Give me a break. 2. I'm sure that I can't just put a FAT formatted flash card in it. I'm sure that I have to use some sort of fucking evil-ass Sony piece of crap, PC-only software for the sole purpose of COPYING FILES TO A FLASH CARD.
Well as much as some /.'ers hate the convergence of phones and would rather wear a utility belt - this looks like a great mix. I think the older generation instead of lamenting that most convergence phone/camera/music/pda phones dont do it right should applaud the ones that do. This looks like a great first step.
Most importantly the battery life kicks ass on this phone in both modes - I really think that this is the acid test for many - What good are feautures if there is no power to turn on the phone.
One day soon I will own a Phone / PDA / iPod / Camera (Still and Motion) with hopefully some GPS thrown in for good measure - Convergence is key - that or bigger pockets.
---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
"if you keep the phone off, otherwise about half that"
uh huh, because it's not like I'd be expecting to receive calls with this phone thing...
But my wife's Siemens SL45 is over three years old now. And it wasn't the first mp3 phone either.
The problem with devices converging is the compromises that are made. Instead of two seperate gadgets that do the job well, in this case a mobile phone and an MP3 player, you get one device that is substandard at everything. To me it seems as if the phone is just a gimmick to sell the MP3 player instead of being a functional replacement for a standalone phone.
Does it play Ogg Vorbis? I bet it doesn't, and I can name several standalone DAPs that do support it and probably have better audio quality.
A substandard MP3 player and a phone with poor battery life if you actually want to use both the components of this device? No thanks, I'll stick to my Rio Karma and my trusty old CDMA phone.
The "obvious" answer is one. The correct answer is unlimited. There is a point where you cannot keep putting devices together. It would be ridiculous to make an "all in one" device that is a phone, a camera, a walkman, and a printer. You would need a seperate "all in one" device that is a printer/fax/scanner/copier. So there are two "all in one" devices already. You can see where this is going.
off-topic: I need my phone to make phone calls. thats it.
ptpete
The reason it's lame -- Sony proprietary Memory Stick.
Also, limited to T-Mobile (US customers) service.
Also, no price announced yet.
Also, DRM music only.
memory stick... don't care about too much
:)
tmobile... great, that's my co.
DRM... where does it say that at? I read Ericsson's site and saw no mention of DRM.
No, see, the whole point is that unless you had your phone on vibrate you would miss their call if you were listening to an ipod. I assume this will do something like turn down the music volume when the phone actually rings, and that the caller will be heard in the headphones. This is one convergence device that makes sense.
Problem is sir, the SD is also proprietary. SD is controlled by Matsushita, Toshiba, and Sandisk. MMC isn't proprietary, but by default pretty much all new MMC slots pretty much needs SD compatibility since consumers don't know the diffrence and expect SDs to work.
Why would Sony dump one proprietary standard just to adopt another which they have to pay licencing fees for? Quite honestly, the Sony-bashing regarding memorysticks is garbage. It would be a valid argument if the alternative was an open standard, however most people seem to endorse SDs. Out of all the pletohra of the small flash multimedia standards that constantly pop up I'm not sure why people only attack Sony.
As far as DRM goes, all other players also have DRM. plus it supports MP3s, so there's a way around it. Also, the phone is GSM/GPRS triband so it will likely work with other GSM services in the future.