Posted by
justin++
on from the books-on-tape dept.
egnarts writes "Drag and drop mp3's to your minidisc, and better still generate voice overs from text. See zdnet for the story " Interesting. Every time I start thinking MD is dead, something happens to it. I wonder how successful this will be. Text-to-Voice could be quite useful.
thanks. now for the $250... guess it's time to sell the other kidney...
Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
mOdQuArK!
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· Score: 2
This sounds like it could be a very popular MP3 player - the manufacturers already have many different styles of Minidisc hardware available, so their engineering cost should be much smaller & be more refined than if they were starting from scratch.
How many minutes of MP3 can a Minidisc hold, anyway?
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
Smurphy
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· Score: 1
All this does is decode the MP3 and record it onto the minidisc, so you get the native capacity of a minidisc. You can get either 74 or 80 minute mindiscs, but the 80s are kinda expensive.
I don't see the big deal about this, I already do this a lot. I just use xmms and record the MP3s onto my MD. $2 for 74mins for a MD versus $100 for another $64MB memory for a Rio? You make the call.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
fizik
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· Score: 1
It holds 74 minutes of audio
Personally I don't even think this item is newsworthy. Let's be realistic, mp3's aren't being stored in data form but in MD's native audio formt. So, by my calculations, I'd say that this has been possible ever since MD's were introduced. Bleh, another company trying to jump on the mp3 bandwagon.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
There's an mp3 bandwagon?
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
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David+Ziegler
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· Score: 1
A 74-minute minidisc is about 120 MB, so assuming a 128kbit MP3, you can fit about two hours. I don't know, however, that this is such a great idea. I mean, the quality of music on a minidisc is really great, I can't tell the difference between my CD's and my MD's. For an extra 45 minutes, you're sacrificing a small amount of quality, but a large amount of compatability, I'd imagine. How's my Sony MD recorder going to behave when it finds an MP3 on a MD? I think it's a cool concept, but this is a bad way to do it. Unless they can come up with a foolproof way to "hide" the MP3 tracks, they're going to ruin compatability. Who knows, maybe I'm wrong? This would be very cool if it works.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
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fizik
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· Score: 1
you get to go for hayrides around the barn
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
It is the whole train man, it's the _real_ digital technology, and those who miss this train will be where they deserve to be.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
hilker
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· Score: 1
This doesn't look very exciting - based on the system requirements, it looks like it's just a portable MD recorder bundled with MP3 management software, with the various supported sound formats just played through your soundcard and recorded (analogue) by the MD recorder. You can do this with any MD recorder out of the box. The text-to-speech function of the software looks pretty cool, but, again, there are other solutions that offer this functionality. Looks like they're charging $250USD for the prestige of having the word "Internet" on the box.
How many minutes of MP3 can a Minidisc hold, anyway?
Based on my assumption above, this device doesn't hold MP3 at all, just re-records it into ATRAC format, so it holds ~74 minutes in stereo, ~148 minutes in mono.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
Kris_J
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· Score: 1
Personally I don't even think this item is newsworthy
Well put. The MD player isn't playing MP3s directly, it's just playing music like they normally do. (Pity I used up my moderator points yesterday...)
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
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phred0
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· Score: 1
Your assumptions are correct. 74 mins stereo ATRAC 4th Generation.
Re:Easy for manufacturers to make?
by
Bartmoss
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· Score: 1
A minidisc stores roughly 120 MB of data, so it ought to be able to hold roughly 2 hours of high quality mp3 music. I don't know why people would bother, though - A minidisc stores 75 minutes of music anyway and wieghs nothing. I always have two additional minidisc in my pockets, that's sufficent for me. Plus my Aiwa MD player has 40h of battery liffe (with the 3 AA battery addon pack).
Not saving MP3s as data? Disappointing...
by
Thag
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· Score: 1
From reading the article, it looks like the MP3s, or whatever, get converted into the Minidisc's sound format then stored on the disc. They don't get stored in their native formats.
This is kind of disappointing. I always thought the minidiscs were kind of cool, especially after I saw STRANGE DAYS, but I want to be able to use them as data diskettes, not proprietary sound format diskettes.
Oh well, there's always the CDR MP3 discman that showed up a few weeks ago...
Jon Acheson
-- All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
Re:Not saving MP3s as data? Disappointing...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
Sony intended to make minidisc-data drives from the start, but it was never done... I really wonder why, as the 140meg disks would probably have been a huge hit since they were several years ahead of zip or ls120. Wonder what Sony was thinking there. Anyway, Sony's own ATRAC compression that allows to store 74 minutes on 140 megs is similar to mp3 and I don't see the deal with halving the bitrate and quality just to say that it's mp3 instead of ATRAC. In the end I don't even see what's the deal with storing mp3s on a 140 meg disk anyway! Think big like Compaq!
Re:Not saving MP3s as data? Disappointing...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
This sounds less than ideal. Minidiscs have compression already, so you will have a scheme like: Source is recorded. source is compressed to MP3 (lossy compression). MP3 is decoded to raw. raw is re-encoded to MiniDisc (another lossy compression). So we are left with a product that puts music through two seperate encodings, each using a different lossy compression scheme which produces a data size that is larger than the original MP3. Hmmm. I'll pass.
Nah, MD really is dead...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I'm sorry for all the fanatics out there, but this thing really is going to go the way of the Betamax. Just like the beta, the quality was superior, but it just never caught on. With cd burners and new DVD technology on the way, I can see these things going out the window real fast. Sorry folks, just my thoughts.
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
by
crivens
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· Score: 1
From what I hear, MDs are huge in Japan. The impression I got was that CDs are history over there, while MDs are everywhere. I was also told that CDs were huge in Japan while North America was still using tapes. Take from that what you will....
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
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AugstWest
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· Score: 2
MD is far from dead. The media's getting cheaper and more people are using it every day. Check out minidisc.org for info.
I can't begin to tell you how convenient it is to have a portable digital recording device. Yes, that's right RECORDING device. It amazes me that noone ever mentions this in their comparisons to the MP3 players. Show me an MP3 player that you can take to a concert, or into the studio, or out into the world to record with. Uh, they don't exist? Right.
And FYI, MD data discs have existed for a very long time. We use them in our 4-track Tascam minidisc recording deck. They're available in any decent music store.
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
by
A.+Lynch
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· Score: 1
The way I see it, its one of the few high-quality, portable audio formats that can be recorded onto. Its great for recording a live concert, or recording a lecture.
I know everyone is shouting about how MP3 players are better than MD players, but what most people don't realize is that yes, one MD disc only holds 74 minutes of music, but its really easy to pack 5 or 6 discs with your player, and have quite a bit of listening time.
It comes down to a question of cost and portability. Unless you have a laptop with a huge HD that can re-d/l to your MP3 player, MD is a better portable solution. And at an average cost of $200 for a recorder/player, it beats the pants off a 64mb MP3 player, or even a 96mb player. Plus, as others have pointed out, $2 for another 74 minutes of listening time is damn cheap compared to a 32mb SmartMedia card (and you don't get the same amount of music).
I own both portable MP3 players and MD devices. My Sharp MD recorder/player is much more useful.
But thats just my take.;-)
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
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jpatokal
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· Score: 1
From what I hear, MDs are huge in Japan. The impression I got was that CDs are history over there, while MDs are everywhere.
Yes, MDs are huge in Japan, but not at the expense of CDs... at least not last year. The MD has, however, entirely replaced the cassette tape as the portable medium of choice.
MDs are also rapidly becoming very popular in Europe, portable MD players are selling like hotcakes. Prerecorded MDs are in short supply though: MDs are used almost exclusively for copying CDs, legally (for own use) and otherwise.
I travel a lot, and a 10pack of MDs and my MD player wipe the floor with my Discman, in terms of size convenience and battery life.
When you're travelling, be it a longhaul flight or the train into work, you really notice that space saving. I can fit my MD player in my pocket, no chance with a Discman.
FWIW, the reasoning behind this, from what I understand, is that there are shops in Japan where CDs can be rented, and ofcourse, duplicated to MD at home, and returned. I have invested in MiniDisc my self, and have been very pleased with it, even over portable CD players. -ceedub
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
MDs are far from dead. They've had a very slow start in the US, partly because Sony tried to push pre-recorded MDs and expensive bulky players at the public in the early days. However, current generation MD players have a lot to offer: digital recording and storage, random access, extremely compact, long battery-life, skip-proof, song and title labels, mono and stereo recording, etc. It's quite possible that RAM or some other disc technology may surpass MDs in the near future, but nothing else really comes close yet.
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
sorry to dissapoint, but md's complement mp3's perfectly.
i have a digital audio card (cheap as chips... xitel platinum storm, w/ aureal vortex 2 chipset) and optically record mp3's to md very regularly..
i'm am also about to buy my third md player.. (give old one to friend..).. the technology just keeps getting better!
battery life is up to > 16 hours off one aa battery.. coupled with an internal re-chargable for playback of >40 hours on some models!
i love these devices.
Re:Nah, MD really is dead...
by
Catullus
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· Score: 1
Sorry, but (as everyone else is saying) the minidisc is nowhere near dead. In the UK, it's catching on in a big way - to the extent that almost all decent hi-fis come with a minidisc deck as standard. The minidisc is the new walkman
As far as sound quality goes, I personally can not tell the difference between a digitally recorded MD and a CD. MP3, on the other hand... sounds crap. Minidiscs are tiny, very resilient, and most importantly look cool. I got my minidisc recorder (the very nice Sharp 722) at Christmas and my MD collection is already larger than my CD collection.
All I can say is that those of you in the States are missing out. And as for price... you can now get recorders for as little as 99UKP and discs for under 2UKP.
So I was wondering whether or not it stores MP3s on the minidisc (the atrac system has a fixed bitrate of 256 kbs, IIRC). Ifso, that'd be great. At 256, mp3s kick ATRAC's ass! (at 128, mp3s are slightly worse than ATRAC, IMHO). However, I suspect that the software is just a glorified format converter.
I tried to check the website or call sharp, but the site is of course all glitz, and 1800 BE SHARP seems specially designed to keep you from actually speaking to anyone. Why do they have those systems? Do they think that by pissing me off, I'm more likely to buy their products?
Anyway, end of rant. If anyone can answer my question, I'd be grateful.
Glorified format converter, unfortunately. But you've got to start somewhere.
Re:does it store as mp3?
by
Jeff+DeMaagd
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· Score: 1
Hmm? Have you tried comparing to ATRAC 3.5? MiniDisc isn't quite a standing-still format, so you'd have to have a recorder that is less than 2 years old to make a fair comparison. I have seen comparisons of people claiming that their newest MD player/recorder was better than 256kbps (neither you nor they mentioned the encoder, it makes a difference in MP3 quality)
This idea is possibly a good one, as current MP3 players are overpriced garbage shackled to Wintel, and uses ludicrously priced Flash upgrades. Why pay 80$ for a 64MB flash cart for !~60 minutes or 128kbps when an MD recordable costs nearly 2$ for 72 minutes, and the player/recorders cost as much as a good MP3 player? For portable applications, the surrounding noise should mask any noticible artifacting either way.
Re:does it store as mp3?
by
jovlinger
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· Score: 1
Hrm. I dunno. I bought the newish aiwa (w/ the blue back light remote control on the headphones and 40 hours batt life) recorder/player, and Esp on massive attack's deep bass voice-overs, I thought I heard quite clear artifacts of compression. Could be my imagination tho. Used the optical cable, so digital transfer all the way.
But BTW, a question about ATRAC:Do all ATRAC implementations compress the same bitstream identically?Is it merely a file format, like MP3, or an algorithm for generating that file format?
What's I'm looking for is an excuse to blame the cheap (presumably) encoder in my aiwa and be able to rest assured that professional equipment would do a better job (not that I'd go through the hassle -- the quality is still quite acceptable -- but I'd like to know it's there).
Just how do you come up with that? The ATRAC algorithm is far better than MP3. It adapts to the music, so you get quality regardless of classical, hiphop, whatever. Areas where MP3 can fall over - percussion and woodwind etc.
I have a Sharp MD722. I also encode CDs to MP3 at 256kbps. I know which I'd choose, and it's not MP3.
--
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
According to the homepage...
by
Synergy1999
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· Score: 1
You can purchase the add-on equipment to make it compatible with ANY Sharp MD portable.
Unfortunately, I can't find the link that allows that purchase just yet.
That REALLY needs to happen soon. I want this on my MT831.
Re:According to the homepage...
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A.+Lynch
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· Score: 1
Good call. I've had my MD-MS702 for awhile now, and use it every so often. More for recording concerts, tho...;-)
An add-on product would be kinda neat, and possibly add value to other manufacturers MD players...
Re:According to the homepage...
by
Oarsman
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· Score: 1
No you can't. It has to be a "Voquette Enabled" mini-disk player. Looking at a page on Voquette's site they say : "Automatically record your playlists onto Voquette enabled devices."
Kinda sucks... any one want a portable MD player? Mine's about to go onsale for about... oh, how's $240 sound? =)
Re:According to the homepage...
by
Baggio
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· Score: 1
What they are showing is the MDMS-15... That is just the a cost reduced version of the MDMT-821. There is nothing special about that recorder.
Sharp® MiniDisc Products Voquette Software and Minidisc Combo. Item Number MDMT15VG
Features Includes MiniDisc MDMS-15 and Voquette Software.
Price: $249.95
This sounds like the recorder could be almost anything. Better yet, get the MDMT-831 and you can control the playlists, edit titles, etc. from a docking station that also serves as a charging stand. I then use the optical out on my soundcard to record anything I want, CD, MP3's. Until I get the digital out of my CD player functioning properly, the track marks are being striped when recording CD, but with the ability to edit MD, that isn't a problem.
Time flies like an arrow;
-- Time flies like an arrow;
Fruit flies like a bananna
Re:According to the homepage...
by
Synergy1999
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· Score: 1
Again... According to Sharp...
"Now you can purchase a Sharp Internet MiniDisc bundle or you can create your own Internet MiniDisc solution by purchasing any Sharp MiniDisc digital recorder/player and the VOQ-070201/MD package separately."
That Really tends to indicate to me that the Voquette-Enabled part is a package that adds to a normal product.
The VOQ-070201/MD package is bundled with the $249 player/recorder that started the post. I'd think it's safe to say it would work with the other MD players (at least other Sharps).
As far as I can tell, they all use the same remote interface, which can be used to control pretty much everything. At least, the same remotes work with the 700-800 series..
Sony MD for MP3....
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I just use my 2 year old recordable Sony MD for mp3 mixes on the road. I set up the mix on the PC, record spidf out to MD and then take it with me. BTW. The battery life on my recordable MD is 3-4 hours with the internal rechargeable battery and 1-2 more with the AA "booster pack". I have never run out with both.
Is it really an MP3 player?
by
Dr.+Evil
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· Score: 1
Or is it just a software package which will let you decode mp3's onto your MD player?
The article doesn't even imply that the product converts text to speech on the fly, and there isn't much to say that it stores MP3s, only that the software allows you to manage and play MP3s.
To do this Sharp has teamed up with Voquette to bundle its NetLink software. This will let you download, record and manage Internet audio files and create personalised playlist. The software will also let you convert text into voice. These playlists can then be recorded onto MiniDiscs for playback on the MD player.
The pricepoint seems pretty average for an MD player too. Does anyone have a link to the product on Sharp's site?
Re:Is it really an MP3 player?
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Sesse
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· Score: 1
Now, why would you want to store MP3s on MiniDisc? I saw a test of ATRAC (the compression used on MD) vs. MP3 once, and ATRAC (even in the early `version' it was in then) came out as the winner.
Sounds like a weird product to me, perhaps I should read the article?;-)
Before you say that MD is dead, try a day as a sound technician. MiniDisc is your friend. One small disc, not hundreds of CDs all over the place. Ability to edit at 1/75 sec resolution (anything more, and it just becomes too clumsy -- try to do editing on any PC program...) and good enough sound quality (yeah, yeah, it sounds different for classical music -- I don't care) -- in short, MD isn't dead. It's wonderful.
/* Steinar */
-- (This comment is of course GPLed.)
Re:MiniDisc is dead? Naah...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Yep, it's dead. Now remember, quality had nothing to do with the "death" of betamax, marketing and high liscensing fees killed betamax. BTW beta is still used in the motion picture industry because of its superior quality.
Re:MiniDisc is dead? Naah...
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Sesse
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· Score: 1
Betamax had something to lose to (VHS). What has MD lost to? MP3 players? Come on, give me a break! Ever seen the media cost of those? Must been something I haven't heard of before...
/* Steinar */
-- (This comment is of course GPLed.)
Re:MiniDisc is dead? Naah...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
its called BETACAM SP, by Sony, its not BETAMAX as such!, totaly different case/tape etc..., SP is a 1foot tape.
Re:MiniDisc is dead? Naah...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
BetaCam SP is available in two cassette sizes small and large. The small size is *exactly* the same size as old fashion BetaMax. In fact Sony introduced BetaCam for professional use as a way of amortizing the R&D and capital investment they made in Betamax hardware.[1] The large size is, well, larger. The tape formulation is different as well. BetaMax used a metal particle formula similar to VHS, BetaCam used the same formulation but ran the tape and heads at a much higher speed. BetaSP uses a metal oxide tape as metal oxide allows you to record a higher frequency thus higher resolution signal. Betamax, BetaCam and BetaCamSP are all 1/2" helical scan videocassette tape formats. [1] Panasonic did the same thing with VHS and it's M and M-II professional videotape formats.
MiniDiscs
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
MiniDiscs owners have always been able to record MP3's to a minidisc, with an optical out on a audio card. Using any player, not just this Sharp player. They can hold 75 min's of music. Battery Life can range from 4 hours - 40 hours depending on model and battery.
Re:MiniDiscs
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
What sound cards exist that have optical outputs?
That would be pretty darn sweet to tie in with a stereo system...
Re:MiniDiscs
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
For starters, check out the Xitel Storm Platinum. It has A3D 2.0 and a fiber optic digital out. I got mine for $80 with a set of bitchin' speakers (they're billed as force-feedback, but it's really more like a subwoofer in a headphone, but I digress). The fiberoptic interface plugs in nicely to my 3.5 year old Aiwa AM-F1. The fiber optic interface acts like a line out, so not onlyl can you record mp3, but any sound coming out of your 'puter. PRetty kewl.
Re:MiniDiscs
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Check out http://www.MiniDisc.org It is the ultimate MiniDisc resource.
Where the hell did you get the Gamer's Edition for $80?
MD the could-have-been "next floppy"
by
fraxinus
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· Score: 1
I think the MD had a chance once, to have been the "next floppy" (as well as zip, ls120 etc) but they blew it. It has never been a data-format really. Losers.
-- // Fraxinus
Re:MD the could-have-been "next floppy"
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
CDR is my floppy, at 1.20$ per CDR, its cheep ass! and u can write multisessions as good as floppies
Funny that they would write about in the UK when it's supposedly only available in the US.
--
Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.
Computer to Audio System interface
by
Raetsel
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· Score: 1
Did anyone else notice that the only way you can connect this to your computer is through a PC Card? I didn't find any reference to any other options...
Granted, you can put a PC Card interface in a desktop, but that's more money spent trying to talk to the thing.
Hey, Sharp! How about USB, Firewire, or Ethernet?
--
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
Re:Computer to Audio System interface
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Raetsel
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· Score: 1
Okay, just so you know I'm not asleep at the switch, I saw the "Voquette" device. I can't find any info on what kind of interface it has. USB? It might be... They certainly allude to connecting it to a PC, and it's software is what's going to be doing the text-to-speech grunt work. It'll be on the minidisc as audio. For some reason, I was assuming otherwise. Oh, well.
What I was looking at was the Sharp MD-X8 system, which is a bookshelf system, and only offers a PC Card interface!
I might forgive a discman-type device that interface, but a (relatively) stationary unit? Please.
I can't find any definative information on the interface of this Voquette device. Anyone have any ideas? Find anything I missed?
--
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
I love my MD player, and the only reason that I haven't gotten a portable MP3 player is because there's just not a big enough advantage over MD, either in size or in fancy-pantsness of the technology. So far, it's been a cumbersome process to pipe data out onto MDs.
I guess Sony has realized that MDs are going to die without being reinvented, or at least do more than take out full-page ads in Urb for a decade at a time. Hopefully, this will help. (And it's sure a hell of a lot cheap than flash RAM.)
ATRAC eats MP3 for breakfast...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
MP3 does not kick ATRAC's ass. If you've ever compared both of them, ATRAC's technology is far superior and sounds vastly better than MP3 could ever dream of. The closest thing to ATRAC is Xing's Variable Bitrate Technology.
While ATRAC *is* a fixed bitrate, it allocates more data for the more complicated segments of the audio spectrum. If you've ever heard MP3 at 256k choke and die on percussion, you'll know what I mean. ATRAC sounds superb, regardless of what you throw at it.
Ask the audiophiles, they'll tell you the same thing.
The impression I get from reading the product pages is that the text-to-voice feature consists of a software synthesizer, which produces audio files that are then sent to the MD, which seems a poor use of storage space. Has anyone found anything to the contrary?
What I'd like to see is a reader that I can dump nice, low-bandwidth raw text files into, so I can listen to articles, Gutenberg etexts, or whatever, while driving, washing dishes, etc. It doesn't seem like it would be too difficult at first glance, but I may be overestimating the state of the art in speech synthesis. How well do the reading machines for the blind do it?
Re:Text to Voice
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
There's already an open source project for that, Festival. It's voices sound kinda bad, it also supports the closed source voice assembler mbrola. Combine that with /dev/speech, and you have a pretty awesome setup. I have a script to do '$command && echo $command done >/dev/speech', crank up your speakers and you get instant notification!
I could well be wildly off the ball with this one, but in the dim and distant past (when MD was released) I remember someone asking Sony how much computer data would go on an MD. They said 100 Mb.
MiniDisc were released for data, seems like ages ago. If you be "nice" if someone came out with this again. I am seriously considering one of these. Also a company offer software with a PC-link to title tracks etc.
here's some links. http://www.minidisc.org --THE Community page http://www.minidisco.com --TOSLINK Soundcard and MD's http://www.jaran-direct.com -- cool stuff from Japan
MD may not be Open Source, but it's FAR from dead.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I use MDs every day. I own a Creative Nomad as well. I also had a Rio PMP300 for about three hours until I returned it. I use Grado SR125 headphones at work. The MD sounds *so* much better than the Nomad it's silly. Maybe it's because Sony just plain makes better gear than Creative? Lack of resolution and feel are my big complaints against the Nomad. The PMP300 was a damn joke -- it sounded like listening to a 1950s transistor radio and it felt cheap as hell.
If Sony made a CDR ISO9660 MP3 player, I'd be very interested -- as long as they use high-quality DACs and other components so it sounds as good as their MD gear.
For now, 90% of my music at work is still listened to on MD rather than MP3s. It all comes down to audio quality and the MiniDisc owns MP3 left and right, from every angle.
Well before Iomega launched its popular but hazardously flawed ZIP product line, Sony announced a portable MD data drive for laptops. The device could access something like 270 MB of data, and at the then-market price of US$15-18 per disc, it should have been a killer. There were several MD data formats slated for rollout: read-only, random access, and a hybrid that had read-only and space for writing.
Imagine what things would have been like if this line had actually become popular, all those years ago? Pocket players using MD to store games, and your place in them. Digital cameras, voice recorders, and PDAs using mass storage smaller than a floppy, with the stability and speed of an optical format and was random access, to boot.
Before you think putting MP3s on MD is a no-brainer, consider this: in an era where laptop drives were under 1/2 gigabyte and single-speed CD writers (not even rewriters) were still priced over US$1000, the market went for "click-of-death" instead of these downright sexy little discs.
That reminds me, I need to go rent Strange Days again.
Sony presented a prototype of a 650MB data MiniDisc on the IFA, a german consumer electronics show, this september. They intend to use it for MPEG1 Video on MD (interesting, eh?), but who says your can't use it for mp3 as well? 8-) 11 CD-DA's on one MD!
Sony unveiled their 650MB MiniDisc digital video recorder at COMDEX (information at C|Net's COMDEX coverage)... it would be nice to see an equivalent version of the high capacity MD as an audio MD. Sony also has a consumer MiniDisc deck that would connect up to a PC via a serial port and digital or analog out to record and send the TOC track and disc names to the device, which then writes it out to the disc. What I would like to see is a iLink/FireWire version of a 650MB Data/Audio MD... that would be able for use with ATRAC and MP3 audio and MPEG videos.
Different format... when the MD drives did come out... even if only for a year or so, they used different discs for data. The two were incompatible. I assume for the sake of compatibility, they will keep audio the same, but you may see them introduce a higher density drive. Time flies like an arrow;
-- Time flies like an arrow;
Fruit flies like a bananna
this device sounds very interesting, and as an avid MD user myself, i'd like to see exactly what its functionality includes. but i've got another questions:
is there an MD-based device that can be used on a personal computer to directly read tracks (digitally) from MD to the hard drive? (like "ripping" an AIFF or WAV from a CD-ROM drive)
i'm a DJ, and i use MDs a lot to record sets (both live and in the studio). it would be a godsend to be able to record and edit tracks on the MD and then copy them to the harddrive for CD-mastering. (especially if the track information could be relayed). currently i'm just recording through my audio ins, which requires doing the track layouts and editing all over again -- a HUGE hassle, as this is MUCH easier to do on MD than on the computer.
i know that an MD-data drive exists, but the MD manufacturers, keen on their closed standards, ensured that data MD-drives cannot read audio-MD disks (and vice-versa). (i won't get into bitching about this -- slashdot users are more than familiar with how closed standards harm consumers).
so does anybody have any information on this? perhaps this new device from Sharp might even save the day? (of course, that is if there's software for it available under Linux or MacOS).
- j --- "The only guys who might buy [the Apple iBook] are the kind who wear those ludicrous baggy pants with the built-in rope that's used for a belt." - John C. Dvorak, PC Magazine
I might be wrong on this, but a MD can hold about 160MB of data - it uses ATRAC compression (the native MD audio format) to hold 74 minutes of music. If this player reads mp3s natively, I might just be tempted to get one. If it takes the mp3 stream and compresses it again (with a loss of sound quality - mp3 and ATRAC are both lossy compression formats) than it doesn't seem worth the bother, I'd be just as happy with an MD player/recorder and a CD player with a digital output.
--
BLOCK STRUCTURE breathing apparatus required for special maneuvers!!
It makes no sense to me. I could buy a mini-disc player before that allowed me to record 74 minutes of audio. Now I can spend more money and still only record 74 minutes of audio?
I think a better idea would be to store and read mp3's directly. Then you might have an interesting product. With 160 MB of data storage, you're talking about roughly 40 songs worth of good quality mp3s. 74 minutes is barely an album.
Are there any entrepreneur's out there that want to make such a beast? It doesn't seem too difficult. We already have MP3 players, they just need to read and write to minidiscs instead of from flash memory or a hard drive.
On another note, I was looking at the Personal JukeBox that's to be released soon, and was wondering who would really want to flip through 100 cd's worth of songs w/ 6 buttons? It better have a damn fine GUI or at least some sort of ability to organize which songs are placed close to eachother.
Text-to-speech for Linux
by
Ledge+Kindred
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· Score: 3
It's something of a hassle to get set up (there are a few software dependencies that you might have to get working first) but once it's going, it's unbelievable. It does stuff like real-time text-to-speech that lets you decide to either have the software "speak" the text directly or write it out as a sound file, "pluggable" voice databases so you can plug in your own phoneme samples that the software will speak with, a scheme-based scripting language and all kinds of other nifty things. Oh yeah, and it is distributed under an X11-style license.
It does a remarkably good job of figuring out how to pronounce words. It's obviously computer-generated, but nonetheless very understandable. The pluggable voice databases is possibly the coolest part, but I've not yet put the effort into figuring out how difficult a new database would be to create/set up.
I think somewhere out there is even a Festival script that gets and speaks the latest/. headlines. Now if only we could get a CmdrTaco voice database for it....
I've found that my optical link between my computer and my MD recorder works just fine. The card was cheap ($79) and allows me to record any audio from my computer on my MD recorder.
Is this what this what the hardware that is bundled with the "Internet MiniDisc" player is, or does it use the analog 1/8" jack?
MD is only dead in the "states"
by
greendot
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· Score: 1
MD is selling like crazy in Japan. I'm not too sure about the European market, but I never am sure with them on any product. It's failing in the states because it was kind of shoved into a niche market. It is better than tape, but too expensive. Worse than CD, and still too exensive. I won't buy production MD's because there is no reason to. I have a CD player with digital outs and can dump a CD down to MD easier than I can rip it to MP3. As far as sound goes, MD started as "almost CD" quality but after a couple generations of reworking, it is now "close to perfect CD". I love them and hope that Sony finishes the HD-MD soon so it may get a good push. Sharp is also working on theri own version of a HD-MD that stores 740 megs of data. I use my MD all the time, it's just too cool. Editing your CD? Never thought I would miss it until I had it. I also use MD instead of DAT for music performances. Try doing random track jumps with a DAT player.
Re:MD is only dead in the "states"
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
If it sold for $99 then it would take off, but $700 in AUSTRALIA, ahhaha, no one buys it but the pure geekos with laywers as parents.
Sharp's product is not new
by
greendot
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· Score: 1
The whole MP3 -> MD thingie Sharp is toutine has been around for years. I bought a Sharp MS702 a few years ago and there was an option to buy a linkup to my PC that would allow a digital dump. The ad at the time was throwing it as your "internet music" tool and when I talked to a rep he told me that it did more than dump MP3's out, it would dump all audio out. I'm assuming that it was all audio that was processed by the CPU since a lot of the CD drives have the direct link to the sound card.
What I think is new is the voice thing. I don't ever remember hearing about that one before today.
Re:Sharp's product is not new
by
Baggio
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· Score: 1
The kit you are talking about was really just soundcard that had optical out... PCMCIA only.
Where MD really shines is in the portables. You can get portable recorders that are barely bigger than the discs (2.5 inch square) themselves and high bitrate) MP3's.
CD-R is great. The media is certainly cheaper than MD. CD sounds better than MD. But it is record-once, and portable playback units, by necessity of the media size, are about 4 times as big as MD units. My MD player runs 12 hrs. on a single AA, it displays album and song titles, and it fits in my shirt pocket. I like it.
Betamax was DOA. MD, however, is extremely poplular in Japan, with sales of pre-recorded MD's outpacing even CD's. That ensures a long life even here, where it is less popular. Just my.02
MD applications
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
It's a bummer that what they're really selling is just a MD recorder and some software. I was hoping that somebody would have wised up and made a MD player that could decode the MP3 format. If some engineer out there wants to make money, build me a data audio player based on the MD format. Support MP3, ATRAC, WMA, SDMI, and all those other acronyms in hardware, and make it so it uses off-the-shelf MDs and you've got yourself a market. Throw in a USB adapter for data transfer, and you'll have a true hybrid device. But since others have seen fit to comment on the impending death of the MD format, let me suggest that there are still plenty of potential applications for a MD like storage system. For example, consider the handheld video game market. Maybe Sony should leverage their Playstation enterprise to produce a portable Playstation based on MDs. You could save your games in a non-volatile format, and with the extra data space games could have voice clips and maybe even a real soundtrack! With some intelligent caching strategies, the disc motor wouldn't need to turn all the time, which would preserve the battery life. Imagine a handheld device with more data space than most Nintendo 64 games, but still small enough to fit in your pocket. Or what about a MD drive that interfaces to your Palm Pilot. You could offload your memos and notes or backup your address book without having to connect back to a computer. Need to copy your friends notes from that important business meeting but don't have enough free space? Just have them dump it to a spare disc. My point is, you can never have enough storage space, especially when it's rewriteable. For their size, the Minidisc format is a good storage system.
Everything that stores 10h of music must die
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The point here is that if you gonna be mobile and carry enough music to avoid being bored, you gotto have some 10+ hours. What 72min make the difference? Do you want to carry all that MDisks with you? Not me, all I want is a one small MP3 player that holds at least 10h and with a decent battery life (10h min), I also want easy recording of radio/external sources.
It is just a matter of time when such killer products will appear. And what you gonna do with this MD player then? Personally I stick to my portable Philips radio, very light, battery life is great and music is different.
Re:Everything that stores 10h of music must die
by
Robert+S+Gormley
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· Score: 1
One exists now, and has done for years. The other is vapourware for the time being. That's the difference. Yes, I realise the MP3 players will come, but still.
HD-MD - 6 hours audio. Yes, I want to carry all those MDs with me, so I can have as much or as little music as I like, without having to redownload music into my MP3 player.
Battery life on a MD is pretty decent too... 15 hours. My Discman used to get 10-12 if I was lucky. Oh, and the MD is only using the internal Li-Ion battery. Mine also allows you to attach an external AA to further increase battery life.
The sound quality on the minidisc isn't more cd-quality than the quality of mp3s. Why store mp3s on a minidisc, when you can store music on it the normal way?
Storing mp3s on a minidisc instead of regular music doesn't gain you anything. You can't have more music on a minidisc just because you choose to store it in mp3 - and the quality doesn't get better either.
The only thing that would make that part more atractive would be if they increased the amount of data that can be stored on the discs...
If you use an MD-ROM, then you open up the possibilities of:
A: Using the device as a laptop drive (cool as shit, I'd *DEFINATELY* get one). It's the same legal loophole that allows the MPMAN to first be sold in the US, since it is more than just an audio playback device, it can be used separately as a data storage device. Of course, with the low prices of MDs (say, in the Asian market) it will actually be *VERY* feasable to use the device as storage alternative.
B: Better transfer rate. To dump 74 mins of audio via Audio out requires 74 minutes. Even if TosLink supports 2x recording, that's still 30+ mins per disc. How long does it take the USB ZIP drive to copy 100Mbs of files? By copying the data accross and have the device being able to natively decode the MP3 off the disc, it would speed up transfer a lot faster.
C: No conversion loss. I have a hard time believing that the transfer is lossless. Even though both formats are digital, both are *LOSSY COMPRESSION* formats. Ever opened a compress TIFF, saved it as a JPEG, and repeat the process a few times?
Minidiscs are cool. Small form factor, virtually indestructable. How many CDs have you scratched? I've washed my Dad's Minidiscs before (oops) and they play perfectly after I dried them out.
Sony makes Discmans with a PCMCIA adaptor to be used as a CDROM drive, why can't they do the same for Minidisc?
It's only not seling well in the US, maybe because people like walkman (tape) here... I got 2 MD walkman myself, and I hardly ever use my discman anymore now.
I've been doing this for the last month since I picked up a Sharp 722 for $200 bucks from minidisco.com. There is no end of the advantages to having MD over plain old mp3 player.
* everytime you want a new song or want to tweak the contents of your MD, you have to reload the whole thing. I feel like a new playlist, I just pop in a new disk.
*Easily dump cd's, mp3s, voice, or mic to the MD. Everything you can dump to a mp3 player.
* MD is standardized. No worries about what nastiness the RIAA can cook up.
* similar battery capacity and size of current mp3 players.
Now that the price for portables has dropped quite a bit, I really think MD's gonna start heading into the mainstream in america. They're insanely popular in japan, and have been for awhile.
Hi Peter.. i would like to get some information about the sound card you are using to dump audio to your md recorder..i am looking for something like this but all i can find are high end professional cards.. cheers, nitin@dccnet.com
Patent Notice
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
My firm has applied to the US Patent Office to patent the process in which we press MP3 files to vinyl. Using this technology, it will be possible to store a full CD's worth of data on a single side of an LP. Expect to see our IPO before Christmas.
Re:Patent Notice
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
What about 8-track? I would love to put my MP3's on 8-track where B. Manilow belongs . . . .
The problems are: 1. There are no MD drives for computers. This means that can't make digital copies of music that we own. 2. Compression algorithm is proprietary. Even if we could get it on a computer, we couldn't play it. 3. No benifit over CDR, CDRW.
Mabye Iomega could have displaced MD completely if two years ago they had someone make a Home Audio Zip/MP3 recorder unit.
But that time has passed. Home audio CD recorders are common. So are mp3 flash recorders.
Why do I need a home audio floppy recorder?
MD Data II
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Like others who have replied I really wanted a MD computer drive, which you could use for data, and directly rip/record onto. I thought MD data was dead but maybe not, check the stuff here and here . The first link is to a MD digital camera (or video maybe) that uses MD Data II (see the logo at the bottom). That's 640 MB as explained in the 2nd link. That's a lot of pictures!
Now all we need are some MD Data computer disk drives!!!!!!!
xmms is an MP3 (and more) player for Unix/X11. You connect to the MD recorder with analog or digital cables. Best thing is a soundcard with an optical digital out (TOSLink). The only drawback is that no consumer grade soundcard (or professional for that matter) can send track marks, so you either split tracks manually or insert ~3 seconds of silence between tracks so the MD recorder can detect track changes. The sweet thing with xmms is that is has a built-in pause function. As Smurphy said, the amount of MD recording space you get for your money beats MP3 hands down. Plus, portable MD recorders/players are cool and sexy, MP3 players are not. (Uuhh , flamebait:) For more info see: http://www.minidisc.org
I know that Sony sells a MD recorder that plugs directly into your serial port. It only works on windows (ugh!) but it supports drag and drop recording from your CD drive(or.wav files I would assume).
-- This life is a test; it is only a test. If it were a real life, you would receive instructions on where to go and what
Yes, that's the MD-PC? series, but does it really copy the music data over the serial port ? As far as I understood it you only control the device from the PC, but record normally from a line-out. On the other hand Sony has released a CD/MD deck that can copy at 4x speed.
-- Someone is wrong on the Internet!
Standardized?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Standardized? What do you mean by that? I thought the format is Sony's prorietary format. Unlike MP3, RIAA very much has helped in cooking the MD format.
Re:Standardized?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
SOny created the MD format, yes. Just like SOny and Phillips created the CD format. HOwever, unlike with BetaMax Sony readily allowed other companies to build MD portables, etc (probably for a small licensing fee).
In any case, I don't think that MD will ever grow to mainstream America but it will always be around (sort of like DAT). What will be big in the next few years will be solid state recording. Even Sony seems to think so. They are aggressivily marketing their memory stick devices over their MD products (at least in the US).
For people like me, this new product from Sharp is a god send. I was thinking of selling all my MD's and my MD hardware for a Diamond Rio or Creative Labs Nomad or for the Sony stick walkman. However, I think I will just buy this product instead. (Thankgod I bought a Sharp Stereo).
What I sent to support@voquette.com
by
kinesis
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· Score: 1
---- begin cut and paste ---
What hardware is required? I imagine i need a sound card w/ optical out, but your site says nothing about how your technology interfaces with the computer or portable player.
Can I record saved MP3 files from my hard disk onto an MD player with your software?
What Mini-Disc players are "Voquette Enabled"?
What does it mean to be "Voquette Enabled"... is it merely a company endorsement or is there some kind of special firmware required to be present on the portable device for you to be able to record onto it?
Also, your feedback form is broken. It complains that "all fields must be filled in" even when they already are.
Now you can purchase a Sharp Internet MiniDisc bundle or you can create your own Internet MiniDisc solution by purchasing any Sharp MiniDisc digital recorder/player and the VOQ-070201/MD package separately.
I know next to nothing about MD players, but since Voquette apparently works with *all* Sharp recorder/players, what would prevent it from working with *any* MD recorder/player (such as Sony, Aiwa, etc.)?
MP3 and E-Text
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Someone has to build a E-Book which uses E-texts that include both text and recorded voice. It would offer a screen and headphones.
You could then switch between reading and listening as needed. (Read on the bus, listen while walking between the bus stop and the office.) You could read and listen at the same time. And it might be handy if you want to review what was just said without interrupting.
Text-To-Voice wouldn't work as well, since a good reader can make a world of difference. I'd rather listen to Christopher Walken reading Poe's The Raven than a computer. (Actually, though, Text-To-Voice would be a nice option for texts which haven't been recorded by a professional. For example, your own notes.)
As the proud owner of a Sony MZ-R50 portable MD recorder and a Sony MDS JE510 home MD deck, and someone with a 3GB+ collection of MP3s and over 220 CDs, I can say that MD rocks!
Find me a portable MP3 player that fits in your jeans pocket and holds 74 minutes of CD quality music. I haven't yet.
CDs portables are too bulky to transport and you can get a MD recorder for the price of a good anti-skip portable CD player.
Not only are MD recorders getting smaller and better battery life, they have a standard media that you can swap any time. I can carry my MD player in one pocket and 4 MD in the other. And with the battery life on just the rechargeable, I can listen to all of those MDs a couple times before my battery dies.
If I want to listen to MP3s I just copy them onto a MD via my JE510. Excellent. Get a sound card with an optical out and your talking digital copying to your MD.(Xitel Storm Platinum is an example)
MD is far from dead. Get your mind out of the US centric world and take a look at Europe and Japan. More MD units are sold in Japan than any where else in the world and they obviously sell, other wise why would new units be made? Check out the new Sony MZ-R90. It's only millimetres larger than an MD and only two MDs thick. And it has a battery life of something like 30 hours.
MD is much more versatile than MP3 and until MP3 units are able to store in the region of 128MB, I won't be buying one.
MD is much more versatile than MP3 and until MP3 units are able to store in the region of 128MB, I won't be buying one.
Heh, if you are waiting for 128, then go ahead and by one, most 2nd generation players have 128 megs chips or flash cards...but the cool stuff is the multi-gig stuff. Like the Empeg and the HanGo Player
> MD is much more versatile than MP3 Sorry, but that makes no sense at all. MD is a physical medium that stores audio. It does it very well, but it cannot be called versatile. MP3 is a compression standard for music/on any media/. Can you email a MD song to a friend? Put it on an FTP site? Share it with napster? Store it on your hard drive? The most important feature of MP3 is that it is not tied to any medium. You can move them around just like any other kind of file. True, MP3 players do not have the capacity, battery life, construction quality, or any number of things, that MD players have. But that will change in the coming years. For now, be happy with your MD, I would be too if I had one, but when the hardware starts improving, MP3 will be the undeniable choice precisely because of versatility.
Personally, I'm waiting for a MP3 player that uses MD disks and technology for storage. Basically, a MD player that uses MP3 instead of ATRAC. This way, you get the advantages of the high MD capacity and skip-free playing, but you have 170mb or so to store MP3's. That's 148 minutes at 128kbps!
(Just as a note: What's the point of copying MP3's to a MD? That sends the audio through _two_ layers of compression. It can't sound very good that way, even with an optical out. At the very best, the quality can't be better than the original 128kps the MP3 was encoded at.)
Heh. Uh, I'll admit to being unfamiliar with the HanGo player you reference, but the Cool Factor of the Sharp MD-based MP3 player consists of the following:
1. The media holds 128mb. 2. It also plays (records?) minidiscs. Like it or not, modern revisions of the ATRAC codec are rather superior to MP3, even at like bitrates (256kbps). 3. The media is cheap. (Compare pricing of a blank MD to a 128meg flash card, and then consider the amount of music one could purchase with the change left over after buying a minidisc or three)
The only un-cool factor about it, compared to flash-based players, is that it can skip. Not that it won't take a high amount of abuse before skippage occurs, but it can happen. Flash doesn't suffer from that problem.
As for the Empeg unit, it's neat. However, (I've expounded upon this at length in the past) putting hard drives inside automobiles is asking for trouble. Witness the fact that the Empeg unit spins down the drive after loading a song into RAM, and you'll see that even the designers of it understand the insurmountable problems involved. Further, once the disc in spun down, one no longer has instant access to other songs, but rather must wait for the drive to come back to life, which tends to work against the instant access Cool Factor of mp3 in general.
All said, an MD-based MP3 portable is very close to the best of all worlds. Instant access to 144 minutes of music, ability to play minidiscs, durability, and low cost of ownership.
I'm sold. Where do I sign up?
(note to those paying attention to the Big Picture: it's likely that Sony will attempt to kill this device by any means possible, as it represents a threat to both their music publishing business and possible future uses of their beloved Memory Stick flash bullshit)
MD players can use MP3 -- that's what the point is -- you give me an MP3 file from an ftp site or your hard drive, and I can play it too. When you are listening to MP3, obviously sound quality is not your highest priority. MD is not CD quality, but it is definately better than MP3.
I guess it's all about your point of view. In your computer-centric world, MP3 is more versatile for transferring music from one place to another. But I just want to grab music and listen to it, so MD is better for me, because I can listen to crappy sound quality MP3, WAV, MOD, and whatever else can come out of my computer, as well as excellent CD recordings using the optical connection.
Bite my Patent
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
This kind of baiting does not belong on/. IPO this pal!
Okay, here is what I want to do: I want to get what I have on my minidiscs burnt onto CD's. What is the best way to do this which preserves the track info? If there were MD drives (like IDE or SCSI) available, then it would be simple. * Stereo component CDR's are no good cuz they can't detect track endings (AFAIK). * Feeding the sound in through a sound card makes me weary because of the noise that might be picked up, and I'd have to manually split up the tracks.
Anybody know of a good way? Looks like others also want a way of getting MD tracks onto their hard drives for one purpose or another, it's amazing that there really doesn't seem to be any way to do it at this point. Please tell me different!:)
Re:MD tracks to hard drive?
by
johnnyangel
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· Score: 1
I've wanted the same thing for some time now.
My minidisc recorder can export tracks onto my hard drive digitally through my Sound Blaster Live, but the tracks don't get split up, so there's no good way to export to CDR without babysitting the whole process or later splitting up massive WAV files.
A long long time ago, my father bought me a MD base unit and two MDWalkmen. I use my Awe64 sound card with one RCA splitter cable running out(to get stereo sound) to the base unit. I use WinAmp to play MP3s and I record them onto my base unit in this fashion. My base unit detects the differences between the tracks and automaticly splits up the tracks(it sometimes screws up and splits a track up or runs two together), but most of the time it works perfectly. If you have a Sony VIAO with the correct software and hardware, then you can do it perfectly every time(I don't have one though). I will post some more information on this when I get home to inform you guys of what model number my base unit is. I know that it was one of the first 10000 produced in the US. The serial number reflects that.
MDs are great and all, but if you're not starting up your own in-home hi-tech audio studio on an unlimited kevin-shields kind of budget, if you just want to play stuff back, why use any sort of removable media? mp3s are fine for just listening--so what i await are small firewire hard drives that have a very simple player attached, or maybe one that's compatible with any range of other devices. plug it in to firewire, download a few gigs of mp3s and hit the road. the VST drives are getting close to the right size, and notebook ones are getting smaller all the time. and honestly, if i can carry gigs of music in one package in a bulky coat pocket, i'll be happy....not like it has to be palm-sized or anything.
Budget? MD722 - reasonably highend for a portable - $200. Pretty comparable to MP3 players.
I'd love to see the costs of that HDD option.
--
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
Ooh! Faster transport for MD!
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Wish I could trade my Sony MZ-R30 for one... if for no other reason that a fast transport. Right now, regardless of whether I want to playback MP3's and record as ATRAC, or just record from CD, I have to wait the entire time of playback. Luckily the media is cheap and removable, unlike Rio, so I don't have to constantly overwrite discs...perhaps I should look at MD-ROM for a speedy recording solution...anybody know anything about that?
Re:Ooh! Faster transport for MD!
by
timecop
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· Score: 1
You DO have to wait for the entire playback with this unit. This does NOTHING new other than supply some Windows98 shitware to play back the sound. I dont think the original kit even comes with a DIGITAL interface, it just has a 3.5mm piggy back audio cable that plugs into your soundcard and a piggyback ps/2 adapter to control the recording and track mark buttons on the unit. What a useless piece of shitware for a price of a good Sony MD player. Sharp sucks anyway.
MD is not dead..then again neither is Beta.
by
JawzX
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· Score: 1
If anyhitng MD in on the upswing. All the hype is long over and prices are falling like stones. Sony's new midd-line portable MD recorder is cheaper than a WM-D3 (about USD $280) pro recording walkman. MD may not be quite up to CD quality but it kicks the crap out of casette tape, and adds tittleing and randon access to boot. As for MD as a storage media for data, it;s been done. You can even still get the things. Problem was speed. They used 2x MD drives...an MD holds about 250meg or so, pretty good for it's size, but not mind blowing, and at 2x it took almost 30min to read/write a disk. Not impressive Also MD's develop errors after about 300-500 re-writes, not fabulous for a data media, but well above average for a music media. AS far as i know no one has tried with faster mechanisms since Sony's failed attempts. If you need portable recoding with good quality MD is cheaper, easier to deal with and more affordable than tape.
PS, anyone know where i can get a Hyper-beta pro deck for less than $5000?
As a sound engineer, it's crap.
by
YuppieScum
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· Score: 2
Nasty, lossy, horrid little thing. Great if sound quality is not the primary concern, but otherwise...still, it's a new toy, so maybe...
What I can't understand is why there was never (and AFAIK is still not) a PC-type MiniDisk drive - approx 300Mb of re-writable storage for 10 quid a throw, they'd have walked all over Iomega.
-- This sig left unintentionally blank.
Re:As a sound engineer, it's crap.
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Sesse
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· Score: 1
Sound quality is not my primary concern, my primary concern is being able to actually have sound in the speakers, without spending those precious seconds looking for a CD, or find out that the CD is all scratched up. I wonder, what do you use instead? Just plain old CDs? What do you do if your dancers come over to you and ask `could you please remove the verse -- we don't like it'?
OK, this sounded real professional. I'm no pro at all, not even close;-)
I personally belive that MD is nifty, but not nifty enough. I like plain ol' CDs these days seeing as I don't have to buy new hardware to listen to the same music. Some mention that prices are falling like a stone, well, you look at the price for an NES these days? It's dropping because its... lets say it together folks... ob... so... lete! Oh well. I could be wrong. I didn't think... and still don't think... DVD is gonna last.
If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
-- If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit. jdube is who I am.
MDs rock, but I doubt they'll be that big
by
joeytsai
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· Score: 2
Don't get me wrong, I love my MD. It's far better than a wimpy Rio and there's some advantages that nothing can compare with:
Even if you had discman that didn't skip, it'd still be pretty large. An MD player and a few MDs is nothing in your pocket.
You CANNOT beat the versatility of recording on a MD. Add, Delete, Combine, Seperate, Move... even the fact that the tracks have name is nice change from CDs where you have to listen to listen to a second or two.
I record easily from CD or MP3, all digitally; the only source of loss is from the ATRAC compression of the MD recorder. And although it only compresses to 1/5 of the size (opposed to 1/12 or whatever with MP3s) even my audiophile friends can't tell the difference (ATRAC has come a long way). The only problem is that MDs have some silly protection that only allow one generation of digital copying (SCMS). I've never had that problem with my MP3s, though.
MDs are cheap! I get 10 packs for $25. I'm sure if I was really stingy I could find 'em cheaper on the net too.
Finally, MDs just look cool! Holding a MD makes me feel like I'm Tom Cruise guarding the NOC files or something high-tech and futuristic. Okay, okay, I'm a geek.
But, especially with that 4.3 GB MP3 player coming out soon, I kinda doubt MD players will go past being a novelty toy. It's only a matter of time before MP3 players shrink to comparable size and incomparable storage. I hope I'm wrong, but I have a feeling I'm not. But until then, I most definitely am enjoying my MD player (A Sharp 722, BTW).
1. There were drives for computer, I haven't seen any in a while though 2. True, but IMHO it's niether here nor there. 3. Not True.
The form factor is sooo much better than any CD based system it's not funny. Name a CDRW (Or anything for that matter) that's as small as the MD, that I can carry around in my shirt/pants pocket, attach a mic to and record 148 Minutes (Mono, stereo at 74min) of a concert/lecture/etc. There's a huge benifit to the small form of minidisc. It's one reason that I really like the DiamondMM mp3 player. It's as much as a good portable MD recorder though and the media is too much $$'s. Plus, I hope that MD2 gets here and it's in audio and data formats. With ATRAC you'd be able to get, what, 5.7 hours of music on a single disc.
Sharp's Press Release has all the spin-doctored details. They've also has a web page dedicated to it. You can buy it now. (Anyone know if they're actually shipping?)
Apparently the Voquette software is the key to all of this. It will allow you to easily put mp3s and Internet audio streams onto any recording medium. They're selling a cassette recorder deal very similar to Sharp's offering. A salvation for those of you without a CD player in your car and no CD-R burner.;)
as i am currently a sound technician at my college as well as the sound technician for two hotels and several production companies, i have found that nothing beats a minidisk when it comes to 'show audio' demands. they are more rugged than cds and the tracks can be rewritten/moved/deleted on a whim. the tracks can also be named which is a tremendous help when trying to run through a set of cues during a large audio sequence. i have also used my linux system to run a show with.mp3s. it looks neat to observers, but then you have to baby the equipment. it is a Bad Thing to get into a sound test and have your hdd crash. mostly, i've found that the best way to do a show is to use my laptop to keep track of my cues/levels/counts/etc as well as timing between cues and then to use the minidisk for the sound itself. long live the minidisk!
There's always sound cards with digital-in ports
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Sound Blaster Live Platinum (for example) has digital I/O (RCA S/PDIF--I think optical is available as an add-on) for somewhere in the $150-200 range. That doesn't move the data any faster, but it prevents sound quality loss, assuming your minidisc player has digital-out.
Uhh... am I missing something?
by
tbcn
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Isn't this sharp md just a normal md with a cable to the pc?
Isn't it just a software that plays the music to be re-recorded into the MD just like as if I'd record it from my CD?
Why have I waited for the next generation of mp3-players?
I want it to be able to load my mp3's and files fast (not the parallell port), and fit atleast an our of good quality music.
But... this sharp thingy is just another md, isn't it? Still moving parts, still compression with loss (cannot be used for data transports). I can't download a file from mp3.com at work, and unload it at home without having to recompress it to mp3 (with loss).
Or is it just me who just didn't understand the function of the thing?
Jeez... comeon... uncompress mp3's with winamp/xmms and record it through your soundcard... Hey, I can do that with my cassette walkman aswell!
-- /tb
Mini Disks are not as good as CDs
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
What some die-hard MD fans do not realize is that MD does not and CAN NOT sound as good as CDs. MDs use a "lossy" compression like MP3s to encode music. The loss of information is especially noticeable in the 15-20KHz region of sound. Some tests done by audiophiles have shown that a tape using Dolby S noise reduction actually sounds better than MD. MD never will catch on as a format in the US just like DATs. The sound doesn't justify the high price tag.
Re:Mini Disks are not as good as CDs
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Anonymous Coward
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Sound quality isn't everything. For me the fast searching compared to tape, and the smaller size compared to CD's was the reason to buy a MD. And most of the time I use my MD in the train, and there is no way that any audiophile in the world is going to hear the difference between MD and CD in such a noisy area..
btw, DAT's can handle higher sound quality than CD's (48.0Khz IIRC).
For a stereo signal it's 292162.5 bits/sec. ATRAC compresses 512 incoming 16 bit samples (1024 bytes) into one ATRAC ``sound group'' (212 bytes) giving an audio compression ratio of 4.83:1. Here is the math:
How does ATRAC compare with MPEG compression? At what bitrate would an MPEG file be equivalent to a song compressed with ATRAC?
ATRAC is 292kbit/sec, giving ``CD like'' audio fidelity. MPEG Layer 1 (i.e. PASC) gives transparent CD fidelity audio at 384kbit/sec, Layer 2 (i.e. Musicam) and Layer 3 give ``CD like'' fidelity at 224kbit/sec and 128kbit/s respectively. A user has compared ATRAC and MPEG Layer 3 and rates ATRAC far better.
--
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
what i'd like to see from MD
by
beckett
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this has probably been iterated and reiterated, but for MD to "take off" (if it's not too late) as a viable mp3 format, they need to produce a cheap IDE drive. that way it could be used for data and music.
that's the one thing that CD's have going for them: cheap drives are available now to write discs that are easily transportable.
that's another reason things like rios and nomads and other mp3 players are not really worth the $$: you need to plug it into your computer to d/l the stuff, adding memory ain't cheap, and it's not like you can lend your tunes to anyone else unless you lend the whole player!
sony, get a cheap IDE MD writer to the peeps and bundle it with an equally cheap player. that'll get people's attention. and forget that funky memory stick idea (:
The MD-DATA format (yes, it is specced) allows for 140mb of data, not 300.
You can buy a MD data recorder for PCs if you look rather hard.
--
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
codec conversion issues?
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ByronEllis
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· Score: 1
Of course, the question becomes what exactly the effect of the encoding-decoding-encoding process will have on the sound quality. Since MP3 and MD use different compression schemes (even if they are only mildly different) it seems that MP3 would lose data in a different frequency range than MD (which uses a variable bitrate encoding scheme that loses more data in the midrange since your ears mostly care about treble and base-- I think www.minidisc.org has a link somewhere to the actual encoding description from Sony Labs) you would end up with a pretty limited dynamic range that sounds kinda flat and nasty.
Other than that, I'm happy to see that companies keep trying with MD's 'cause that just makes it easier for me to find discs for my Sharp MD-722 (battle-worn but surviving much better than my portable CD players ever have-- and it fits in my pocket so I can carry it everywhere:-))
Rainbow Book, I believe. ATRAC is algorithm based.
--
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
MiniDisc is far from "dead"
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Anonymous Coward
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In order to believe MD is dead, you must deny yourself exposure to the Asian consumer marketplace at large. MD is primarily pushed by Sony, and there exist other backers such as Kenwood and Sharp, all of whom produce nifty, tiny MD players that are typically even smaller than the mp3 players here (notice Asian vs. North American attention to size/convinience).
Music is sold through retail outlets on CD (in Japan, a lot on MD), and copied onto MD in private collections. Most of my friends here (in N.A.) have MD portable players that they record mp3 audio onto, and subsequently listen to them on the MD decks in their cars.
This is but a partial substantiation of the fact that MD is gaining a larger audience, in part due to the advance into foreign, third world countries, such as the split russian states...
MiniDisc and MP3 audio do not target the same market. Sony is currently busy marketing MD to those who are looking for the next generation Compact Cassette. This includes not juse audiophiles, but DJs and the like. Philips are currently targetting exactly the same market with CD-R (I wonder who's going to win:-). Who are MP3s players going to? People who want their MP3 collection portable. A quite different market segment.
MiniDisc is taking off (in Australia). Blanks are ~AU$7 each and still falling. I know of at least three friends who are into MiniDisc. I couldn't say that 6 months ago.
I think the US (and I believe Canada) have some kind of fool tax on recordable audio media that have plagued cassettes for ages and affect minidiscs. Blank MD's here, if you can find them, are at best US$3 apiece, while I've heard that in Japan they sell for the equivalent of US$0.50.
Apparently, if I remember correctly, the biggest reason for the difference is NOT overseas manufacturing, but rather that the US charges the manufacturers a tax on EACH DISC PRODUCED, to help ASCAP (or whatever that horrid acronym is -- rhymes with "asscrap") avoid the piracy losses derived from people trying to understand why an audio CD that costs $0.23 to press costs the consumer $17.
My local Tower records actually has a small rack of pre-recorded MD's, and I've noticed that CDNow appears to be starting to stock them. Sony's got a website that sells them for slightly cheaper than the CD equivalent (in most cases). I'd almost be inclined to start buying them, but it's cheaper for me to still buy plainjane CDs, and then if I want to transport them, make a (temporary) digital-to-digital dub from my DVD player to my MD pack.
Leave it to the US lawmakers to completely screw over great technology in one of the largest consumer markets in the world.
-- If it's not important, you can probably find it in...
--
If it's not important, you can probably find it in...
Project Galactic Guide (
what we need is a FAST download md drive.
by
Courier9
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probably one of the biggest things holding back minidisc is that alot of us are lazy as hell. I want to just mount that drive, cp over some.atrac's *faster* than realtime, and be done with it. even if the designers were anal and wouldnt allow copying files off the minidisc and onto your computer i wouldnt care, i just want to get them onto the disk fast, and not worry about titling, or "scheduling" the next dump session of mp3's.
Sony already makes a MD player recorder that uses a serial port interface(IIRC). It costs $300 and supports drag and drop from your cd-rom drive. Very cool IMHO and a lot better than this piece of crap that sharp is pushing. I would be able to tell you exactly how cool it is, but I'm too broke.
-- This life is a test; it is only a test. If it were a real life, you would receive instructions on where to go and what
Re:Better solution for PC->MD
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adolf
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Er. No, the Sony MD recorder that includes a serial interface does nothing more than turn your computer into a glorified remote control. What's more, in order to take advantage of the drag and drop 'features,' one must use a Sony CD player connected via toslink to the MD deck. No ripping occurs with the CD-ROM drive, and no direct reading or writing of MD data is possible (at least when using the included software).
This doesn't look like an MP3 player, at all!
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mindstrm
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It's just a minidisc player + some windows software that will 'record' whatever you want onto the MD, possibly in a more automatic fashion. ie: it decompresses the mp3, and re-compresses it to MD.
If I understand this correctly, they are simply recording MP3,RA,etc onto MD?
Anyone can plug the output from their sound cards into the input of any portable recording device. The only 'new' thing I see with this is that they have some of the playlist editing capabilities built into a PC program.
Most MD players with recording capabilities can do the same anyway.
Another thing to note is that you are converting from the lossy MP3 audio model to the also lossy but different MD audio model. I would assume this would lead to sound quality slightly below the original MP3s.
Lack of digital output
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The MD format is potentially a very good platform for live recording, such as concerts. One drawback to MD is the lossy compression of music. Although some live recording enthusiasts would disagree, reduced quality is not as important in live recording situations. The current standard for good live recording is DAT. DAT is certainly the highest quality available right now, but is also expensive and of limited utility. DAT is popular because it is digital, and exact copies can be made and traded amongst enthusiasts. MD's low price, small size, other "normal" uses, and especially good sound quality would make it a nice alternative to DAT. One of the reasons that I haven't purchased an MD recorder yet is the unavailability (AFAIK) of a portable MD recorder with digital output, which I could use to transfer my recordings to CDR as well as mp3 without additional loss of quality. I think the lack of digi-outs is for anti-pirating restrictions, but not everyone wants to become a pirate. I think some full-size MD decks have digi-out, but at that point, I could have bought a DAT recorder with digi-outs (I think all have digi-out) for less. If any manufacturers are reading this, please consider making a portable MD recorder with digital output. Thanks.
Re:Optical Link Card
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
...I used 1/4" two track @ 15ips - the classic Revox B77 - and edits were with razor blades and chinagraph pencil.
However, last tour I did (a few years ago now) I did the rehearsal playback using my PC and an early version of SAW - then burnt a couple of CDs and toured that.
Cost of the PC + burner was (and probably still is) less than a B77.
Thanks for the info. BTW, I searched Freshmeat for SAW, and found nothing. If there was something for PC that could work approximately like an MD, I would want that:-) (I'm working a bit on my own program to do something like that, but surely somebody must have had about the same idea?)
Alas, there seem to be no MD Data drives for actual computers; MD Data seems to be only usable as a medium for multitrack recording.
Btw, how do MD Data discs differ from normal MDs? Is it just a matter of the makers marking them as usable for data and charging 5 times as much for them?
Many things with a lot of high frequencies will sound harsh when converted to ATRAC. (For example, most of The Glove's Blue Sunshine; great album, but the MiniDisc I made of it doesn't sound so good.)
ZIP disks are large and bulky. To carry a portable ZIP Audio player, you'd need a backpack. CDs are too large as well. (Compared to MDs, anyway.)
A MD recorder, however, will fit in a trouser pocket snugly. And not only can you play music on it, you can also plug in a microphone and record whenever it takes your fancy to do so.
Yes, Sony *did* make Data Minidiscs
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Anonymous Coward
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They were way overpriced (around $500-600 I believe, you could have gotten high capacity MO) and this is what killed them IMHO. It could have been the zip drive... oh well..
Marketing Fluff?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Looking at the announcements and descriptions, it appears that this isn't anything really new. The software appears to be an enhanced "media player", and the cable appears to be an audio cable that connects from your PC's sound card to the MD recorder (the cable may have some extra control lines to perhaps cause the MD recorder to start/stop recording, etc.).
In other words, you're basically recording sound (MP3s, CD audio, etc.) played by your PC onto the MD recorder. Nothing really new.
Don't get me wrong -- I happen to like MiniDiscs (I bought my MD player/recorder after being disappointed by the 1st/2nd generation of MP3 players). However, this annoucement looks like fluff to me.
Software Audio Workshop. When I used it, it was a 16-bit Win3.1 (please don't shoot, it was a long time ago) stereo HD-recording tool.
I know there is are many tools like this out there now - some must be available for Linux - but unfortunately (at the behest of my GF) I have a real job now:(
Did anyone come across the battery life for any of these things? It doesn't say on ZDnet or the homepage for the player as far as I can tell.
This sounds like it could be a very popular MP3 player - the manufacturers already have many different styles of Minidisc hardware available, so their engineering cost should be much smaller & be more refined than if they were starting from scratch.
How many minutes of MP3 can a Minidisc hold, anyway?
From reading the article, it looks like the MP3s, or whatever, get converted into the Minidisc's sound format then stored on the disc. They don't get stored in their native formats.
This is kind of disappointing. I always thought the minidiscs were kind of cool, especially after I saw STRANGE DAYS, but I want to be able to use them as data diskettes, not proprietary sound format diskettes.
Oh well, there's always the CDR MP3 discman that showed up a few weeks ago...
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
I'm sorry for all the fanatics out there, but this thing really is going to go the way of the Betamax. Just like the beta, the quality was superior, but it just never caught on. With cd burners and new DVD technology on the way, I can see these things going out the window real fast. Sorry folks, just my thoughts.
So I was wondering whether or not it stores MP3s on the minidisc (the atrac system has a fixed bitrate of 256 kbs, IIRC). Ifso, that'd be great. At 256, mp3s kick ATRAC's ass! (at 128, mp3s are slightly worse than ATRAC, IMHO). However, I suspect that the software is just a glorified format converter.
I tried to check the website or call sharp, but the site is of course all glitz, and 1800 BE SHARP
seems specially designed to keep you from actually speaking to anyone. Why do they have those systems? Do they think that by pissing me off, I'm more likely to buy their products?
Anyway, end of rant. If anyone can answer my question, I'd be grateful.
You can purchase the add-on equipment to make it compatible with ANY Sharp MD portable.
Unfortunately, I can't find the link that allows that purchase just yet.
That REALLY needs to happen soon. I want this on my MT831.
I just use my 2 year old recordable Sony MD for mp3 mixes on the road. I set up the mix on the PC, record spidf out to MD and then take it with me. BTW. The battery life on my recordable MD is 3-4 hours with the internal rechargeable battery and 1-2 more with the AA "booster pack". I have never run out with both.
Or is it just a software package which will let you decode mp3's onto your MD player?
The article doesn't even imply that the product converts text to speech on the fly, and there isn't much to say that it stores MP3s, only that the software allows you to manage and play MP3s.
The pricepoint seems pretty average for an MD player too. Does anyone have a link to the product on Sharp's site?
Before you say that MD is dead, try a day as a sound technician. MiniDisc is your friend. One small disc, not hundreds of CDs all over the place. Ability to edit at 1/75 sec resolution (anything more, and it just becomes too clumsy -- try to do editing on any PC program...) and good enough sound quality (yeah, yeah, it sounds different for classical music -- I don't care) -- in short, MD isn't dead. It's wonderful.
/* Steinar */
(This comment is of course GPLed.)
MiniDiscs owners have always been able to record MP3's to a minidisc, with an optical out on a audio card. Using any player, not just this Sharp player. They can hold 75 min's of music. Battery Life can range from 4 hours - 40 hours depending on model and battery.
I think the MD had a chance once, to have been the "next floppy" (as well as zip, ls120 etc) but they blew it. It has never been a data-format really. Losers.
// Fraxinus
Product Info From Sharp
Funny that they would write about in the UK when it's supposedly only available in the US.
Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.
Granted, you can put a PC Card interface in a desktop, but that's more money spent trying to talk to the thing.
Hey, Sharp! How about USB, Firewire, or Ethernet?
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
I love my MD player, and the only reason that I haven't gotten a portable MP3 player is because there's just not a big enough advantage over MD, either in size or in fancy-pantsness of the technology. So far, it's been a cumbersome process to pipe data out onto MDs.
I guess Sony has realized that MDs are going to die without being reinvented, or at least do more than take out full-page ads in Urb for a decade at a time. Hopefully, this will help. (And it's sure a hell of a lot cheap than flash RAM.)
MP3 does not kick ATRAC's ass. If you've ever compared both of them, ATRAC's technology is far superior and sounds vastly better than MP3 could ever dream of. The closest thing to ATRAC is Xing's Variable Bitrate Technology.
While ATRAC *is* a fixed bitrate, it allocates more data for the more complicated segments of the audio spectrum. If you've ever heard MP3 at 256k choke and die on percussion, you'll know what I mean. ATRAC sounds superb, regardless of what you throw at it.
Ask the audiophiles, they'll tell you the same thing.
The impression I get from reading the product pages is that the text-to-voice feature consists of a software synthesizer, which produces audio files that are then sent to the MD, which seems a poor use of storage space. Has anyone found anything to the contrary?
What I'd like to see is a reader that I can dump nice, low-bandwidth raw text files into, so I can listen to articles, Gutenberg etexts, or whatever, while driving, washing dishes, etc. It doesn't seem like it would be too difficult at first glance, but I may be overestimating the state of the art in speech synthesis. How well do the reading machines for the blind do it?
I could well be wildly off the ball with this one, but in the dim and distant past (when MD was released) I remember someone asking Sony how much computer data would go on an MD. They said 100 Mb.
But then that was years ago...
I use MDs every day. I own a Creative Nomad as well. I also had a Rio PMP300 for about three hours until I returned it. I use Grado SR125 headphones at work. The MD sounds *so* much better than the Nomad it's silly. Maybe it's because Sony just plain makes better gear than Creative? Lack of resolution and feel are my big complaints against the Nomad. The PMP300 was a damn joke -- it sounded like listening to a 1950s transistor radio and it felt cheap as hell.
If Sony made a CDR ISO9660 MP3 player, I'd be very interested -- as long as they use high-quality DACs and other components so it sounds as good as their MD gear.
For now, 90% of my music at work is still listened to on MD rather than MP3s. It all comes down to audio quality and the MiniDisc owns MP3 left and right, from every angle.
Well before Iomega launched its popular but hazardously flawed ZIP product line, Sony announced a portable MD data drive for laptops. The device could access something like 270 MB of data, and at the then-market price of US$15-18 per disc, it should have been a killer. There were several MD data formats slated for rollout: read-only, random access, and a hybrid that had read-only and space for writing.
Imagine what things would have been like if this line had actually become popular, all those years ago? Pocket players using MD to store games, and your place in them. Digital cameras, voice recorders, and PDAs using mass storage smaller than a floppy, with the stability and speed of an optical format and was random access, to boot.
Before you think putting MP3s on MD is a no-brainer, consider this: in an era where laptop drives were under 1/2 gigabyte and single-speed CD writers (not even rewriters) were still priced over US$1000, the market went for "click-of-death" instead of these downright sexy little discs.
That reminds me, I need to go rent Strange Days again.
Get off my launchpad!
Sony presented a prototype of a 650MB data MiniDisc on the IFA, a german consumer electronics show, this september. They intend to use it for MPEG1 Video on MD (interesting, eh?), but who says your can't use it for mp3 as well? 8-) 11 CD-DA's on one MD!
this device sounds very interesting, and as an avid MD user myself, i'd like to see exactly what its functionality includes. but i've got another questions:
is there an MD-based device that can be used on a personal computer to directly read tracks (digitally) from MD to the hard drive? (like "ripping" an AIFF or WAV from a CD-ROM drive)
i'm a DJ, and i use MDs a lot to record sets (both live and in the studio). it would be a godsend to be able to record and edit tracks on the MD and then copy them to the harddrive for CD-mastering. (especially if the track information could be relayed). currently i'm just recording through my audio ins, which requires doing the track layouts and editing all over again -- a HUGE hassle, as this is MUCH easier to do on MD than on the computer.
i know that an MD-data drive exists, but the MD manufacturers, keen on their closed standards, ensured that data MD-drives cannot read audio-MD disks (and vice-versa). (i won't get into bitching about this -- slashdot users are more than familiar with how closed standards harm consumers).
so does anybody have any information on this? perhaps this new device from Sharp might even save the day? (of course, that is if there's software for it available under Linux or MacOS).
- j
---
"The only guys who might buy [the Apple iBook] are the kind who wear those ludicrous baggy pants with the built-in rope that's used for a belt." - John C. Dvorak, PC Magazine
I might be wrong on this, but a MD can hold about 160MB of data - it uses ATRAC compression (the native MD audio format) to hold 74 minutes of music. If this player reads mp3s natively, I might just be tempted to get one. If it takes the mp3 stream and compresses it again (with a loss of sound quality - mp3 and ATRAC are both lossy compression formats) than it doesn't seem worth the bother, I'd be just as happy with an MD player/recorder and a CD player with a digital output.
BLOCK STRUCTURE breathing apparatus required for special maneuvers!!
Festival
It's something of a hassle to get set up (there are a few software dependencies that you might have to get working first) but once it's going, it's unbelievable. It does stuff like real-time text-to-speech that lets you decide to either have the software "speak" the text directly or write it out as a sound file, "pluggable" voice databases so you can plug in your own phoneme samples that the software will speak with, a scheme-based scripting language and all kinds of other nifty things. Oh yeah, and it is distributed under an X11-style license.
It does a remarkably good job of figuring out how to pronounce words. It's obviously computer-generated, but nonetheless very understandable. The pluggable voice databases is possibly the coolest part, but I've not yet put the effort into figuring out how difficult a new database would be to create/set up.
I think somewhere out there is even a Festival script that gets and speaks the latest
-=-=-=-=-
-=-=-=-=-
My mom's going to kick you in the face!
Is this what this what the hardware that is bundled with the "Internet MiniDisc" player is, or does it use the analog 1/8" jack?
MD is selling like crazy in Japan. I'm not too sure about the European market, but I never am sure with them on any product. It's failing in the states because it was kind of shoved into a niche market. It is better than tape, but too expensive. Worse than CD, and still too exensive. I won't buy production MD's because there is no reason to. I have a CD player with digital outs and can dump a CD down to MD easier than I can rip it to MP3. As far as sound goes, MD started as "almost CD" quality but after a couple generations of reworking, it is now "close to perfect CD". I love them and hope that Sony finishes the HD-MD soon so it may get a good push. Sharp is also working on theri own version of a HD-MD that stores 740 megs of data. I use my MD all the time, it's just too cool. Editing your CD? Never thought I would miss it until I had it. I also use MD instead of DAT for music performances. Try doing random track jumps with a DAT player.
The whole MP3 -> MD thingie Sharp is toutine has been around for years. I bought a Sharp MS702 a few years ago and there was an option to buy a linkup to my PC that would allow a digital dump. The ad at the time was throwing it as your "internet music" tool and when I talked to a rep he told me that it did more than dump MP3's out, it would dump all audio out. I'm assuming that it was all audio that was processed by the CPU since a lot of the CD drives have the direct link to the sound card.
What I think is new is the voice thing. I don't ever remember hearing about that one before today.
SR125's rule!
Where MD really shines is in the portables. You can get portable recorders that are barely bigger than the discs (2.5 inch square) themselves and high bitrate) MP3's.
CD-R is great. The media is certainly cheaper than MD. CD sounds better than MD. But it is record-once, and portable playback units, by necessity of the media size, are about 4 times as big as MD units. My MD player runs 12 hrs. on a single AA, it displays album and song titles, and it fits in my shirt pocket. I like it.
Betamax was DOA. MD, however, is extremely poplular in Japan, with sales of pre-recorded MD's outpacing even CD's. That ensures a long life even here, where it is less popular. Just my .02
It's a bummer that what they're really selling is just a MD recorder and some software. I was hoping that somebody would have wised up and made a MD player that could decode the MP3 format. If some engineer out there wants to make money, build me a data audio player based on the MD format. Support MP3, ATRAC, WMA, SDMI, and all those other acronyms in hardware, and make it so it uses off-the-shelf MDs and you've got yourself a market. Throw in a USB adapter for data transfer, and you'll have a true hybrid device. But since others have seen fit to comment on the impending death of the MD format, let me suggest that there are still plenty of potential applications for a MD like storage system. For example, consider the handheld video game market. Maybe Sony should leverage their Playstation enterprise to produce a portable Playstation based on MDs. You could save your games in a non-volatile format, and with the extra data space games could have voice clips and maybe even a real soundtrack! With some intelligent caching strategies, the disc motor wouldn't need to turn all the time, which would preserve the battery life. Imagine a handheld device with more data space than most Nintendo 64 games, but still small enough to fit in your pocket. Or what about a MD drive that interfaces to your Palm Pilot. You could offload your memos and notes or backup your address book without having to connect back to a computer. Need to copy your friends notes from that important business meeting but don't have enough free space? Just have them dump it to a spare disc. My point is, you can never have enough storage space, especially when it's rewriteable. For their size, the Minidisc format is a good storage system.
The point here is that if you gonna be mobile and carry enough music to avoid being bored, you gotto have some 10+ hours. What 72min make the difference? Do you want to carry all that MDisks with you? Not me, all I want is a one small MP3 player that holds at least 10h and with a decent battery life (10h min), I also want easy recording of radio/external sources.
It is just a matter of time when such killer products will appear. And what you gonna do with this MD player then? Personally I stick to my portable Philips radio, very light, battery life is great and music is different.
Minidiscs are just as good without mp3-support.
;)
The sound quality on the minidisc isn't more cd-quality than the quality of mp3s. Why store mp3s on a minidisc, when you can store music on it the normal way?
Storing mp3s on a minidisc instead of regular music doesn't gain you anything. You can't have more music on a minidisc just because you choose to store it in mp3 - and the quality doesn't get better either.
The only thing that would make that part more atractive would be if they increased the amount of data that can be stored on the discs...
The voice-thing does sound cool though
It's only not seling well in the US, maybe because people like walkman (tape) here... I got 2 MD walkman myself, and I hardly ever use my discman anymore now.
I've been doing this for the last month since I picked up a Sharp 722 for $200 bucks from minidisco.com. There is no end of the advantages to having MD over plain old mp3 player.
* everytime you want a new song or want to tweak the contents of your MD, you have to reload the whole thing. I feel like a new playlist, I just pop in a new disk.
*Easily dump cd's, mp3s, voice, or mic to the MD. Everything you can dump to a mp3 player.
* MD is standardized. No worries about what nastiness the RIAA can cook up.
* similar battery capacity and size of current mp3 players.
Now that the price for portables has dropped quite a bit, I really think MD's gonna start heading into the mainstream in america. They're insanely popular in japan, and have been for awhile.
Check my Go-related blog for beginners: DGD
Hi Peter.. i would like to get some information about the sound card you are using to dump audio to your md recorder..i am looking for something like this but all i can find are high end professional cards.. cheers, nitin@dccnet.com
My firm has applied to the US Patent Office to patent the process in which we press MP3 files to vinyl. Using this technology, it will be possible to store a full CD's worth of data on a single side of an LP. Expect to see our IPO before Christmas.
MD is the same technology as the ZIP drive.
The problems are:
1. There are no MD drives for computers. This means that can't make digital copies of music that we own.
2. Compression algorithm is proprietary. Even if we could get it on a computer, we couldn't play it.
3. No benifit over CDR, CDRW.
Mabye Iomega could have displaced MD completely if two years ago they had someone make a Home Audio Zip/MP3 recorder unit.
But that time has passed. Home audio CD recorders are common. So are mp3 flash recorders.
Why do I need a home audio floppy recorder?
Like others who have replied I really wanted a MD computer drive, which you could use for data, and directly rip/record onto. I thought MD data was dead but maybe not, check the stuff here and here . The first link is to a MD digital camera (or video maybe) that uses MD Data II (see the logo at the bottom). That's 640 MB as explained in the 2nd link. That's a lot of pictures!
Now all we need are some MD Data computer disk drives!!!!!!!
How do you connect to your PC? What type of cable do you use between the MD and your PC? What's xmms?
Standardized?
What do you mean by that? I thought the format
is Sony's prorietary format.
Unlike MP3, RIAA very much has helped in cooking the MD format.
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What hardware is required? I imagine i need a sound card w/ optical out, but your site says nothing about how your technology interfaces with the computer or portable player.
Can I record saved MP3 files from my hard disk onto an MD player with your software?
What Mini-Disc players are "Voquette Enabled"?
What does it mean to be "Voquette Enabled"... is it merely a company endorsement or is there some kind of special firmware required to be present on the portable device for you to be able to record onto it?
Also, your feedback form is broken. It complains that "all fields must be filled in" even when they already are.
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I'll let everyone know if they reply...
I miss 8-track!!
http://www.sharp-usa.com/inte rnetminidisc/create.html
Also, if you look at the image on http://www.sharp-usa.com/inter netminidisc/index.html you see some sort of special black box with the Voquette logo on it. So there's some bundled hardware...
Also, the Voquette softare looks decidedly Win98-ish.
You could then switch between reading and listening as needed. (Read on the bus, listen while walking between the bus stop and the office.) You could read and listen at the same time. And it might be handy if you want to review what was just said without interrupting.
Text-To-Voice wouldn't work as well, since a good reader can make a world of difference. I'd rather listen to Christopher Walken reading Poe's The Raven than a computer. (Actually, though, Text-To-Voice would be a nice option for texts which haven't been recorded by a professional. For example, your own notes.)
As the proud owner of a Sony MZ-R50 portable MD recorder and a Sony MDS JE510 home MD deck, and someone with a 3GB+ collection of MP3s and over 220 CDs, I can say that MD rocks!
Find me a portable MP3 player that fits in your jeans pocket and holds 74 minutes of CD quality music. I haven't yet.
CDs portables are too bulky to transport and you can get a MD recorder for the price of a good anti-skip portable CD player.
Not only are MD recorders getting smaller and better battery life, they have a standard media that you can swap any time. I can carry my MD player in one pocket and 4 MD in the other. And with the battery life on just the rechargeable, I can listen to all of those MDs a couple times before my battery dies.
If I want to listen to MP3s I just copy them onto a MD via my JE510. Excellent. Get a sound card with an optical out and your talking digital copying to your MD.(Xitel Storm Platinum is an example)
MD is far from dead. Get your mind out of the US centric world and take a look at Europe and Japan. More MD units are sold in Japan than any where else in the world and they obviously sell, other wise why would new units be made? Check out the new Sony MZ-R90. It's only millimetres larger than an MD and only two MDs thick. And it has a battery life of something like 30 hours.
MD is much more versatile than MP3 and until MP3 units are able to store in the region of 128MB, I won't be buying one.
Really Bored?? http://ivany.org
This kind of baiting does not belong on /. IPO this pal!
Okay, here is what I want to do: I want to get what I have on my minidiscs burnt onto CD's. What is the best way to do this which preserves the track info? If there were MD drives (like IDE or SCSI) available, then it would be simple.
:)
* Stereo component CDR's are no good cuz they can't detect track endings (AFAIK).
* Feeding the sound in through a sound card makes me weary because of the noise that might be picked up, and I'd have to manually split up the tracks.
Anybody know of a good way? Looks like others also want a way of getting MD tracks onto their hard drives for one purpose or another, it's amazing that there really doesn't seem to be any way to do it at this point. Please tell me different!
forget mini discs, i wnat the mini drives.
Wish I could trade my Sony MZ-R30 for one... if for no other reason that a fast transport. Right now, regardless of whether I want to playback MP3's and record as ATRAC, or just record from CD, I have to wait the entire time of playback. Luckily the media is cheap and removable, unlike Rio, so I don't have to constantly overwrite discs...perhaps I should look at MD-ROM for a speedy recording solution...anybody know anything about that?
If anyhitng MD in on the upswing. All the hype is long over and prices are falling like stones. Sony's new midd-line portable MD recorder is cheaper than a WM-D3 (about USD $280) pro recording walkman. MD may not be quite up to CD quality but it kicks the crap out of casette tape, and adds tittleing and randon access to boot. As for MD as a storage media for data, it;s been done. You can even still get the things. Problem was speed. They used 2x MD drives...an MD holds about 250meg or so, pretty good for it's size, but not mind blowing, and at 2x it took almost 30min to read/write a disk. Not impressive Also MD's develop errors after about 300-500 re-writes, not fabulous for a data media, but well above average for a music media. AS far as i know no one has tried with faster mechanisms since Sony's failed attempts. If you need portable recoding with good quality MD is cheaper, easier to deal with and more affordable than tape.
PS, anyone know where i can get a Hyper-beta pro deck for less than $5000?
A Call For A New Slashdot Moderation Level!
Nasty, lossy, horrid little thing. Great if sound quality is not the primary concern, but otherwise...still, it's a new toy, so maybe...
What I can't understand is why there was never (and AFAIK is still not) a PC-type MiniDisk drive - approx 300Mb of re-writable storage for 10 quid a throw, they'd have walked all over Iomega.
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I personally belive that MD is nifty, but not nifty enough. I like plain ol' CDs these days seeing as I don't have to buy new hardware to listen to the same music. Some mention that prices are falling like a stone, well, you look at the price for an NES these days? It's dropping because its... lets say it together folks... ob... so... lete! Oh well. I could be wrong. I didn't think... and still don't think... DVD is gonna last.
If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
jdube is who I am.
Don't get me wrong, I love my MD. It's far better than a wimpy Rio and there's some advantages that nothing can compare with:
Even if you had discman that didn't skip, it'd still be pretty large. An MD player and a few MDs is nothing in your pocket.
You CANNOT beat the versatility of recording on a MD. Add, Delete, Combine, Seperate, Move... even the fact that the tracks have name is nice change from CDs where you have to listen to listen to a second or two.
I record easily from CD or MP3, all digitally; the only source of loss is from the ATRAC compression of the MD recorder. And although it only compresses to 1/5 of the size (opposed to 1/12 or whatever with MP3s) even my audiophile friends can't tell the difference (ATRAC has come a long way). The only problem is that MDs have some silly protection that only allow one generation of digital copying (SCMS). I've never had that problem with my MP3s, though.
MDs are cheap! I get 10 packs for $25. I'm sure if I was really stingy I could find 'em cheaper on the net too.
Finally, MDs just look cool! Holding a MD makes me feel like I'm Tom Cruise guarding the NOC files or something high-tech and futuristic. Okay, okay, I'm a geek.
But, especially with that 4.3 GB MP3 player coming out soon, I kinda doubt MD players will go past being a novelty toy. It's only a matter of time before MP3 players shrink to comparable size and incomparable storage. I hope I'm wrong, but I have a feeling I'm not. But until then, I most definitely am enjoying my MD player (A Sharp 722, BTW).
http://www.talknerdy.org
1. There were drives for computer, I haven't seen any in a while though
2. True, but IMHO it's niether here nor there.
3. Not True.
The form factor is sooo much better than any CD based system it's not funny.
Name a CDRW (Or anything for that matter) that's as small as the MD,
that I can carry around in my shirt/pants pocket, attach a mic to and record 148 Minutes (Mono, stereo at 74min) of a concert/lecture/etc.
There's a huge benifit to the small form of minidisc. It's one reason that I really like the DiamondMM mp3 player. It's as much as a good
portable MD recorder though and the media is too much $$'s.
Plus, I hope that MD2 gets here and it's in audio and data formats. With ATRAC you'd be able to get, what, 5.7 hours of music on a single disc.
Sharp's Press Release has all the spin-doctored details. They've also has a web page dedicated to it. You can buy it now. (Anyone know if they're actually shipping?)
;)
Apparently the Voquette software is the key to all of this. It will allow you to easily put mp3s and Internet audio streams onto any recording medium. They're selling a cassette recorder deal very similar to Sharp's offering. A salvation for those of you without a CD player in your car and no CD-R burner.
as i am currently a sound technician at my college as well as the sound technician for two hotels and several production companies, i have found that nothing beats a minidisk when it comes to 'show audio' demands. they are more rugged than cds and the tracks can be rewritten/moved/deleted on a whim. the tracks can also be named which is a tremendous help when trying to run through a set of cues during a large audio sequence. i have also used my linux system to run a show with .mp3s. it looks neat to observers, but then you have to baby the equipment. it is a Bad Thing to get into a sound test and have your hdd crash.
mostly, i've found that the best way to do a show is to use my laptop to keep track of my cues/levels/counts/etc as well as timing between cues and then to use the minidisk for the sound itself.
long live the minidisk!
Sound Blaster Live Platinum (for example) has digital I/O (RCA S/PDIF--I think optical is available as an add-on) for somewhere in the $150-200 range. That doesn't move the data any faster, but it prevents sound quality loss, assuming your minidisc player has digital-out.
Isn't it just a software that plays the music to be re-recorded into the MD just like as if I'd record it from my CD?
Why have I waited for the next generation of mp3-players?
I want it to be able to load my mp3's and files fast (not the parallell port), and fit atleast an our of good quality music.
But... this sharp thingy is just another md, isn't it? Still moving parts, still compression with loss (cannot be used for data transports). I can't download a file from mp3.com at work, and unload it at home without having to recompress it to mp3 (with loss).
Or is it just me who just didn't understand the function of the thing?
Jeez... comeon... uncompress mp3's with winamp/xmms and record it through your soundcard... Hey, I can do that with my cassette walkman aswell!
/tb
What some die-hard MD fans do not realize is that MD does not and CAN NOT sound as good as CDs. MDs use a "lossy" compression like MP3s to encode music. The loss of information is especially noticeable in the 15-20KHz region of sound. Some tests done by audiophiles have shown that a tape using Dolby S noise reduction actually sounds better than MD. MD never will catch on as a format in the US just like DATs. The sound doesn't justify the high price tag.
Actually there was a MiniDisc drive for the PC and mac. There's a page on it at Minidisc.org
Photos of bits of the past hiding in the present: afiler.com
For a stereo signal it's 292162.5 bits/sec. ATRAC compresses 512 incoming 16 bit samples (1024 bytes) into one ATRAC ``sound group'' (212 bytes) giving an audio compression ratio of 4.83:1. Here is the math:
44100 samples/sec (incoming single channel rate)
/ 512 samples/soundgroup (giving 86.133 soundgroups/sec/channel)
* 2 channels (giving 172.266 stereo soundgroups/sec)
* 212 bytes/soundgroup (giving 36.5K stereo bytes/sec)
* 8 bits/byte (giving stereo bits/sec)
= 292162.5 bits/sec.
How does ATRAC compare with MPEG compression? At what bitrate would an MPEG file be equivalent to a song compressed with ATRAC?
ATRAC is 292kbit/sec, giving ``CD like'' audio fidelity. MPEG Layer 1 (i.e. PASC) gives transparent CD fidelity audio at 384kbit/sec, Layer 2 (i.e. Musicam) and Layer 3 give ``CD like'' fidelity at 224kbit/sec and 128kbit/s respectively. A user has compared ATRAC and MPEG Layer 3 and rates ATRAC far better.
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
this has probably been iterated and reiterated, but for MD to "take off" (if it's not too late) as a viable mp3 format, they need to produce a cheap IDE drive. that way it could be used for data and music.
that's the one thing that CD's have going for them: cheap drives are available now to write discs that are easily transportable.
that's another reason things like rios and nomads and other mp3 players are not really worth the $$: you need to plug it into your computer to d/l the stuff, adding memory ain't cheap, and it's not like you can lend your tunes to anyone else unless you lend the whole player!
sony, get a cheap IDE MD writer to the peeps and bundle it with an equally cheap player. that'll get people's attention. and forget that funky memory stick idea (:
You can buy a MD data recorder for PCs if you look rather hard.
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
Of course, the question becomes what exactly the effect of the encoding-decoding-encoding process will have on the sound quality. Since MP3 and MD use different compression schemes (even if they are only mildly different) it seems that MP3 would lose data in a different frequency range than MD (which uses a variable bitrate encoding scheme that loses more data in the midrange since your ears mostly care about treble and base-- I think www.minidisc.org has a link somewhere to the actual encoding description from Sony Labs) you would end up with a pretty limited dynamic range that sounds kinda flat and nasty.
:-))
Other than that, I'm happy to see that companies keep trying with MD's 'cause that just makes it easier for me to find discs for my Sharp MD-722 (battle-worn but surviving much better than my portable CD players ever have-- and it fits in my pocket so I can carry it everywhere
Rainbow Book, I believe. ATRAC is algorithm based.
Open Source. Closed Minds. We are Slashdot.
In order to believe MD is dead, you must deny yourself exposure to the Asian consumer marketplace at large. MD is primarily pushed by Sony, and there exist other backers such as Kenwood and Sharp, all of whom produce nifty, tiny MD players that are typically even smaller than the mp3 players here (notice Asian vs. North American attention to size/convinience).
Music is sold through retail outlets on CD (in Japan, a lot on MD), and copied onto MD in private collections. Most of my friends here (in N.A.) have MD portable players that they record mp3 audio onto, and subsequently listen to them on the MD decks in their cars.
This is but a partial substantiation of the fact that MD is gaining a larger audience, in part due to the advance into foreign, third world countries, such as the split russian states...
MiniDisc is taking off (in Australia). Blanks are ~AU$7 each and still falling. I know of at least three friends who are into MiniDisc. I couldn't say that 6 months ago.
Wade.
probably one of the biggest things holding back minidisc is that alot of us are lazy as hell. .atrac's *faster* than realtime, and be done with it. even if the designers were anal and wouldnt allow copying files off the minidisc and onto your computer i wouldnt care, i just want to get them onto the disk fast, and not worry about titling, or "scheduling" the next dump session of mp3's.
I want to just mount that drive, cp over some
Sony already makes a MD player recorder that uses a serial port interface(IIRC). It costs $300 and supports drag and drop from your cd-rom drive. Very cool IMHO and a lot better than this piece of crap that sharp is pushing. I would be able to tell you exactly how cool it is, but I'm too broke.
This life is a test; it is only a test. If it were a real life, you would receive instructions on where to go and what
It's just a minidisc player + some windows software that will 'record' whatever you want onto the MD, possibly in a more automatic fashion.
ie: it decompresses the mp3, and re-compresses it to MD.
No big deal. Boring. Ho-hum.
If I understand this correctly, they are simply recording MP3,RA,etc onto MD?
Anyone can plug the output from their sound cards into the input of any portable recording device. The only 'new' thing I see with this is that they have some of the playlist editing capabilities built into a PC program.
Most MD players with recording capabilities can do the same anyway.
Another thing to note is that you are converting from the lossy MP3 audio model to the also lossy but different MD audio model. I would assume this would lead to sound quality slightly below the original MP3s.
The MD format is potentially a very good platform for live recording, such as concerts. One drawback to MD is the lossy compression of music. Although some live recording enthusiasts would disagree, reduced quality is not as important in live recording situations. The current standard for good live recording is DAT. DAT is certainly the highest quality available right now, but is also expensive and of limited utility. DAT is popular because it is digital, and exact copies can be made and traded amongst enthusiasts. MD's low price, small size, other "normal" uses, and especially good sound quality would make it a nice alternative to DAT. One of the reasons that I haven't purchased an MD recorder yet is the unavailability (AFAIK) of a portable MD recorder with digital output, which I could use to transfer my recordings to CDR as well as mp3 without additional loss of quality. I think the lack of digi-outs is for anti-pirating restrictions, but not everyone wants to become a pirate. I think some full-size MD decks have digi-out, but at that point, I could have bought a DAT recorder with digi-outs (I think all have digi-out) for less. If any manufacturers are reading this, please consider making a portable MD recorder with digital output. Thanks.
I'm not peter .. but here's what i have:
.. (for windows ... )
http://www.xitel.com/
very nice card
You can tell the difference right out. It screws up classical music significantly. Enough to where the common person can usually tell.
...I used 1/4" two track @ 15ips - the classic Revox B77 - and edits were with razor blades and chinagraph pencil.
However, last tour I did (a few years ago now) I did the rehearsal playback using my PC and an early version of SAW - then burnt a couple of CDs and toured that.
Cost of the PC + burner was (and probably still is) less than a B77.
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Alas, there seem to be no MD Data drives for actual computers; MD Data seems to be only usable as a medium for multitrack recording.
Btw, how do MD Data discs differ from normal MDs? Is it just a matter of the makers marking them as usable for data and charging 5 times as much for them?
Many things with a lot of high frequencies will sound harsh when converted to ATRAC. (For example, most of The Glove's Blue Sunshine; great album, but the MiniDisc I made of it doesn't sound so good.)
ZIP disks are large and bulky. To carry a portable ZIP Audio player, you'd need a backpack. CDs are too large as well. (Compared to MDs, anyway.)
A MD recorder, however, will fit in a trouser pocket snugly. And not only can you play music on it, you can also plug in a microphone and record whenever it takes your fancy to do so.
They were way overpriced (around $500-600 I believe, you could have gotten high capacity MO) and this is what killed them IMHO. It could have been the zip drive... oh well..
In other words, you're basically recording sound (MP3s, CD audio, etc.) played by your PC onto the MD recorder. Nothing really new.
Don't get me wrong -- I happen to like MiniDiscs (I bought my MD player/recorder after being disappointed by the 1st/2nd generation of MP3 players). However, this annoucement looks like fluff to me.
I use the Storm Platinum found at http://www.xitel.com. It is a great sound card with alot of features.
Enjoy!
Peter
Software Audio Workshop. When I used it, it was a 16-bit Win3.1 (please don't shoot, it was a long time ago) stereo HD-recording tool.
:(
I know there is are many tools like this out there now - some must be available for Linux - but unfortunately (at the behest of my GF) I have a real job now
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