MP3/CD Players Reviewed 194
nd writes "It seems the MP3 CD players (previously thought to be complete vaporware after literally years of delays) are finally starting to hit the market. IGN has posted a review comparing the Mambo-X vs. MPTrip. Both players are discman-like in appearance, and play CDR/CDRW's containing MP3 files."
mobile MP3s - processor not required! (Score:1)
http://www.crutchfield.com/
goto "car products" then "in-dash CD"
models by Aiwa and Kenwood
J
Re:Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:1)
Re:Effect (Score:1)
As Chuck D said, don't believe the hype.
Re:Effect (Score:1)
Now think about how little work goes into making a comp...
Now, repeat after me the capitalist mantra:
$.02Re:Effect (Score:2)
Re:In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:1)
The guy tells me the first shipment of ~1300 units arrives late August. Since there's a backorder of ~1400-1500 as of today (7/11/00) the SECOND batch arrives a month after.. so I'm looking at placing an order mid - late september.
Re:Anyone figured out how to navigate directories? (Score:1)
Documentation sucks, but if you play with it enough you can figure it out.
I love mine (Score:1)
Sure the design could use a little work, but it's one of those things where once you get used to it, you've got it down.
Just another learning curve.
After using mine for the past four months, I have absolutely no gripes about shelling out the $120 for it. I would do it again in a heartbeat.
~Chris
doesn't quality matter to anyone? (Score:1)
as an artist i would be more offended that people were not hearing my music as it was meant to be heard than that they were hearing it for free. If the louvre offered free admission to anyone wearing darkglasses would you take them up on it? i would rather pay for quality. Find a way to get fast free records through gnutella and you will have progress. now all you have is change for the worse.
Re:196kbps bit rate limit (Score:1)
Did anyone else notice this? (Score:1)
Re:What about MD? (Score:1)
_joshua_
Someday... (Score:1)
An LCD screen with SOMETHING that even remotely resembles a way of keeping track of 100+ tracks
Great battery life
A nice system for recording voice notes to myself (which, happily, is available to some extent)
A system that won't die if it hits a single bad MP3 or a single non-MP3 file
A way of making 10 or 20 bookmarks to the start of each set of tracks
A +10 and -10 button for track selection
And while I'm asking, I guess I also want a pony...
GlowingSpleen
Niftyness.com makes my feet hurt.
Where is it available in the UK? (Score:1)
Re:Gonna buy one... but... (Score:1)
Adams MP3/VCD/CD Player (Score:2)
Thanks! (Score:1)
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:1)
I wouldn't exactly call it "available"
-M
Re:Effect (Score:1)
mp3 to go go in a car. (Score:1)
50 seconds of 'buffer' (or as they say, anit-skip) is great for cars. It's too bad the better MPTrip didn't come with the remote... With 200+ songs on one CD-R, you'r gonna want that to type track number in and move between the songs! If you had your favorite CD-R in a car, I'm sure that you'd memorize some of the numbers of your favorite songs!
Rader
Still vaporware (Score:2)
Funny enough people on e-bay auction where to get information on where to buy these things.
amazeing.
-Jon
Re:What about MD? (Score:1)
When I can see the name of the song I'm playing, THEN I'll buy an MP3CD player.
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Kevin Mitchell
Re:Are *starting* to hit the market? (Score:1)
-motardo
Re:Effect (Score:1)
Meanwhile, the engineers and staffers (who BTW I *have* met, and within whose ranks I used to number myself) get paid chump change, while the corporate execs and the shareholders rake in big profits. Have you ever seen a *studio engineer* riding in a limo? Get real! Spare me the rhetoric about engineers going homeless, and instead ask why Edgar Bronfman, Jr., the grandson of a bootlegger, is a multimedia tycoon.
Learn a little bit about how the media industry works. A big hit movie, like "Coming To America", for example, TO DATE still has not shown a profit on the corporate ledger, despite hundreds of millions of dollars flowing to the studio from theater showings, video rentals, promotional items, and the like. It never will. That's how the business is set up, in movies and music.
I'll support the artist. I'll buy the new Public Enemy direct from Chuck D for $8.00, knowing that he'll get approx. $7.50 of that--I'd rather give him $8, knowing he'll get most of it, than give $15.99 to Best Buy or Tower Records, knowing that at most he'll get $.85 from them.
I didn't initially suggest that you get a clue, but from your response, I think you'd better first figure out the name of the game.
cd's (Score:1)
kick some CAD [cadfu.com]
Re:Effect (Score:1)
This is why MP3s do not harm the economy!!! (Score:2)
These look awesome. Unlike before when you could only put 80 minutes onto CD, you can now put roughly the equivilent of 8 CDs onto one disk.
You must be blind not to see the effect that Napster is having on how we listen to music. These players are the result of an explosion of mp3 popularity. Once things like this are widely deployed (still waiting for a car stereo version), we're going to see sales on this stuff (including CD-writing equipment) sky rocket.
You see, when ever I hear some artist cry about how Napster is stealing the food out from his children's dinner plates, I laugh my fucking head off. Because if you're independant enough to come up with your own opinions, you begin to understand that they are nothing but money grubbing thiefs. They don't care about their "intellectual property", or "artist's rights". All they care about is their green pocket liners.
It's sad, but technology like this, allowing you to put even MORE music onto a CD, will never make it into the music recording industry. It's just a way of selling more product for less.
And don't you start with the "holier than thou" attitude, calling me a pirate, or an intellectual property thief. Have you ever thought that maybe just because something is illegal does not necessarily make it immoral?
Keep everything in perspective. Metallica no longer produces good music. They don't need to. They're just selling a name now. And people are just now beginning to wake up and realize it. Hey, I agree, Metallica is a great band, they're just obsolete now. People have stopped buying their records, and Lars is pissed that he's not god anymore.
Honestly, I applaud these companies. They are pushing us into our new music revolution.
Re:format (Score:1)
Re:Variable Bitrate decoding (Score:2)
But the MPTrip does support VBR. Although the track display will freak out...
Re:Looks like they better work on battery technolo (Score:1)
Re:What about MD? (Score:1)
I am very leery of buying a MD player/recorder, not necessarily because of the recording quality, but because I'm afraid I'm going to cough up $200 for the next Betamax. Feh, I say.
Re:My review of MPTrip/Genica (Score:1)
The Genica and the MPTrip are both the same player from a company called Dragon State [sasdragon.com.hk] with different logos slapped on.
RCA Player might have that... (Score:1)
Re:First of a new breed (Score:2)
10 Hours, Random Access (Score:3)
Cost is not even a consideration. You have to look ahead a bit, and see how quickly these devices (cdburners and such) are becoming ubiquitous. Granted, at present it's largely a mid-upper middle class thing, but that is already changing rapidly. It's like when people used to think the idea of a 'personal computer' was laughable. Things with this sort of power get assimilated quickly.
Variable Bitrate decoding (Score:1)
Any review based on "How thin the plaster is" will not be respected.
Re:Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:2)
When? (Score:1)
Bottom line -- these things will remain vaporware until I can buy one "Off the shelf"....And play around with it a day or 2 before it becomes obsolete...
IMHO
Re:MPTrip / EasyBuy2000 impressions (Score:1)
_joshua_
Re:First of a new breed (Score:1)
Battery life in MPtrip (Score:1)
Re:What about MD? (Score:1)
I personally wouldn't buy an MD player. The only benefit I see is the small size and possibly the inexpensive (when compared to flash memory for portable MP3 players) storage medium. I think I'll stick with my CD player, and pick up an MP3/CD player when they start supporting ID3 tags.
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Kevin Mitchell
Re:OT: Site for old radio shows? (Score:2)
_joshua_
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:1)
Re:What about MD? (Score:1)
Looks like they better work on battery technology (Score:2)
Gotta get one of these for my car!
Re:Are *starting* to hit the market? (Score:1)
Do you have a link to a place that's *SHIPPING* these?
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:1)
What the world really needs...ain't this (Score:1)
If you need a CD burner to make MP3 cds for these, why not just burn a real audio CD of your favorite mix and use it on your trusty old discman? Fewer songs, true, but you can just burn more cds. Having fewer tracks on a CD is an advantage, especially if the MP3 cd players like these don't have track listings.
sorry. I'll just save the $200 and buy a 10-disc changer for my car...
Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:1)
MPTrip (Score:1)
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:1)
-motardo
ZDTV's review of the MPTrip (Score:2)
Re:In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:1)
anyway, it replaces your cd changer, and has a 5 gig cart on it (laptop HD).
they had a working version at the mp3 summit, so i'd assume they're coming out soon.
check it out here [phatnoize.com]
(fixed url) Re:In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:1)
www.phatnoise.com [phatnoise.com]
Re:MPTrip / EasyBuy2000 impressions (Score:1)
Re:mp3 to go go in a car. (Score:1)
Re:MPTrip / EasyBuy2000 impressions (Score:1)
Maybe I just got lucky enough to get the Microsoft "feature" Enhanced version.
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:1)
You're the first person I've heard that's gotten one for less than ~$650.
Re:Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:1)
But for those players that support CD-RW, that isn't an issue. Just stick your CD-RW disc back in your computer, add your new songs (or delete the ones you're tired of), and away you go. After all, these basically are first-generation players that are bound to be improved on when/if they catch on big time. Look at how far the DVD player has come since it was introduced.
Come to think of it, this is probably the only real use I can think of wanting a CD-RW for. Wouldn't CD-RW and CD MP3 players be a kick-ass combination?
--
Re:In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:1)
A) Delphiauto [delphiauto.com] will be installing these things into GM cars over the next year or so.
B) cat-5? why? IEEE 802.11 wireless is the way man. Of course, this could lead to drive-by downloading... ;)
Re:doesn't quality matter to anyone? (Score:1)
> people were not hearing my music as it was
> meant to be heard than that they were hearing
> it for free
Silence is just a very, very low quality mp3. You really want that?
Ryan
Re:Can you imagine... (Score:1)
Surround sound, silly.
Ryan
Re:What the world really needs...ain't this (Score:1)
Can you try a little harder with your trolls, in the future?
Re:Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:1)
The Jukebox is the dream, I agree! However early reviews show that sorting through directories on it is a pain.
Re: Check out crutchfield (Score:2)
The reason the aiwa is temp. out of stock is that they scrapped their design and decided to start over sometime earlier this year, delaying their release until late june/august.
Crutchfield and buyitnow.com are the only 2 places I've been able to find the aiwa cdc-mp3 online, both for the same price ($299).
They do support ID3 tags but not CD text, and play CDRs and CDRWs. The neatest little gadget, though, is the steering wheel remote
Supposedly a guy on ebay will sell you a place to find it cheap for $1, also.
-nicole
Re:Why I think MP3 CD players both suck & blow (Score:1)
196kbps bit rate limit (Score:2)
--
Re:format (Score:1)
Not really news (Score:1)
Metallica (Score:1)
Oh, boy, here it comes...
Re:Are *starting* to hit the market? (Score:2)
Component players have been avaiable (as you said) for quite some time now. Hell... there are even quite a number of DVD players that will also play MP3 CDRs/CDRWs. And some of these DVD players are cheap.
In fact, Apex makes one that only cost about $150 that plays DVDs, VCDs, audio CD/CDR/CDRW, and MP3 CDR/CDRW. I couldn't find a price on the Terratec website, but I'm betting that the little booger isn't as good a deal as the Apex player. (The Apex player also allows you mess with the CSS and region codes for DVDs!)
Sir Poopsalot
High Bitrate Encoding (Score:2)
Anyone have similar problems, or know if these two mp3 players can encode anything above 192? Personally, I try to encode at > 160 bitrate, because if I run 128k mp3s out from my PC through my relatively high end stereo, it sounds like utter crap. If I were to purchase an mp3 player, may it be portable or set-top, would probably be run through my stereo at one point or another, and if it sounds like crap, I won't buy it.
few mistakes (Score:2)
The VBR is what sold me on it, I would hate to rencode some perfectly good 128-192kbit songs just to put them on a CD.
btw: I don't think either run linux
-Jon
Re:Unfortunately, the MPTrip dies on non-MP3 files (Score:1)
If I were to buy one of these, or the in-dash [slashdot.org] models, I'd mainly want to put it on random play. Make a few CD-RW's with a common theme or band for each one, stick 'em in, listen to 'em for the entire three hour drive back home.
50 secs of antiskip? (Score:3)
Re:CD's? No Hard drive? Yes (Score:2)
Re:Gee, isn't that nice? (Score:2)
Re:CD's? No Hard drive? Yes (Score:2)
Be honest. When was the last time most of us went for a jog?
Re:What about MD? (Score:2)
Sharp [sharp-usa.com] has a product called Voquette that connects to a MiniDisc player and allows playback of various sound formats, including MP3. It also includes software for sending files to/from your MD player.
Here are the relevant links:
MPTrip / EasyBuy2000 impressions (Score:5)
The first thing I noticed when I opened it was the EUROPEAN AC ADAPTER. Thanks, you jerks. I'm pretty sure that I'm a freak accident on their part, but still - what a kick in the pants?
I've played several MP3-filled CD-R's in it, haven't tried any CD's or CD-RW's, yet. The first I tried, I had made the stupid decision to fill the CD with MP3's, all in one directory (all from the same band - why not?) It can only play the first 77 songs in the directory, of about 120. So, don't do that.
Then I discovered that there's a Next button, but no Previous button. I can't go BACK one song. (I think I might be able to, by hitting Preview twice in a row.) The buttons are kind of crappy, but they work just fine. The Play / Pause button is the smallest one on the thing. The rubber feet on mine are of different heights, so it doesn't sit level. The ear-buds are kind of sucky, but they're not that bad. So what? Buy another pair, and you're good to go.
But, it does play MP3's from a CD-R, and it sounds good. AND it DOES NOT SKIP. I've done the "shake and bake" on it, while listening, and no audio degradation. I also dropped it on the floor, hard enough for it to open the case and drop the CD-R on the floor, but it still runs just fine.
All told - imagine a $40 CD player. Yeah - seriously - that bad (except it sounds good - it's just chintzy material, bad design, etc). Then, make it play MP3s off of CD-R's (and supposedly CD-RW's). And that makes all the difference! =) Mine is definitely worth the $115 I put in it. I can run with it, and have a LARGE selection of random music to listen to. And I can have a nice on-the-plane distraction (my ENTIRE music collection in a 24-CD-R case). So, just ignore the crappy quality, and enjoy the hours of good-sounding tunes, and you'll be fine.
When some respectable company finally comes out with a good-quality model, I'll undoubtedly buy it, even at twice the price. I want a Previous button pretty badly. And an LCD that actually shows the ID3 tag would be REALLY REALLY nice. (Also being able to use a Playlist would be very nice.)
Final review : 3 out of 5 stars. Does what it's advertised to do - PLAYS MP3 CD-R's, and seems like it's not going to break or otherwise fail. It just doesn't have ANY bells or whistles that you'd expect. NONE, okay? It just PLAYS, it doesn't do anything else!!! Oh yeah - I've had it for 28 hours, and it's already got MASSIVE scratches on it's crappy gold surface from carrying it in a backpack with CD-R's in their cases. =(
Re:Not really news (Score:2)
Re:These are also available for Car Audio (Score:2)
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Moderate Up! (Score:2)
From looking at the Expanium website (light on details but still informative) it at least supports VBR and encoding up to 320kbs, also has some nice features like 8 second scan, and 100 seconds of skip protection at 128kbps. It also says it will play for 10 hours on two AA batteries, so at least it'll last a whole CD!
No mention though of handling playlists or other important details, but at least it will be pretty solid compared to the efforts produced so far.
Amazing how hard it is to break into the consumer electronics market, you would have thought good portable players would have been out some time ago.
Philips to unite MP3 and CD technology (Score:3)
My review of MPTrip/Genica (Score:4)
The skip protection is terrible, both for audio cds and mp3s.
Finally, I have problems with it reading cdrws. The best part of having one of these is the ability to burn a cdrw, and when you're tired of those songs, just erase it and burn more. I have an HP cdburner and some high quality maxell cdrws, and a great deal of the time when I turn the thing it on it says it can't find any files, and then the times when it can find them it has trouble playing them. It'll play them with lots of skipping (not due to the player getting banged around, it just has trouble reading the files). It's really frustrating when you turn it on to listen to some music and it tells you it can't find the songs.
Here's a cnet review: http://electronics.cnet.com/cgi/crunch/FReview2.a
Maybe I should try to return mine...
Effect (Score:3)
If they feel that they are able to make a buck off this technology, they may change their tune.
What about MD? (Score:2)
I've been thinking about getting a sharp 722 MD player, but no one even allows you to digitally transmit audio to MD, everything goes through a converter when they're compressed on input.
It would be really nice to buy $2 md discs (at 140 megs each) and use that for mp3.
It would be much nicer than CDR or even those players using Clik drives IMHO.
-js
First of a new breed (Score:2)
Sarcastic replies welcome!
Gonna buy one... but... (Score:2)
However, it'd be reaally great if they played multisession CD's (which I don't see listed as an ability) so I can add MP3's at any time - better yet, it'd be great if they supported UDF so I can just drag-and-drop arrange/take off/add files at any time. Sadly, that isn't here yet... in the meantime, I'm just going to enjoy what I get.
Re: Check out crutchfield (Score:3)
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MpTrip...well...before that (Score:3)
I really enjoy listening to it the music sounds great and I practically never have to switch CDs. The one truly negative comment I have is the keys are slightly hard to press. Once you press them they work but some are small and must be pressed rather hard to register. Maybe they've fixed this since then though I doubt it. Its a flaw with the overall design (switches being located on the lower half and buttons on the upper half).
The instructions that came with it were unintelligible. Until now I had no clue it was capable of 500 seconds of voice recording, though of what use this I don't know. I did glean from them that if you record your songs in directories labeled "directory1, directory2..." that you can play just the songs in that directory. Of course you also have the option of playing randomly, just a single song, or all of them sequentially.
I do reccommend buying another set of earphones, the earphones it comes with can be rough on your ears after extended periods of time. And at 100$ you can certainly afford a pair of earphones and still have spent less than if you were to purchase a competing player.
Re:format (Score:2)
Are *starting* to hit the market? (Score:2)
Okay, a little concurrention ain't bad as we always say...
Re:Looks like they better work on battery technolo (Score:2)
In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:2)
Since we're chatting about portable sound, anyone know of any good in-car or in-dash .mp3 players? Not a portable you plug in, but something you actually install in the vehicle?
My dream one day is running a CAT-5 cable out the the car and downloading!
Re: "Preview" and "Next" button (Score:2)
These are also available for Car Audio (Score:5)
Re:In-dash MP3 player? (OT) (Score:2)
Empeg [empeg.com] is what you want. Better start saving now, though. They ain't cheap.
-Isaac
Unfortunately, the MPTrip dies on non-MP3 files (Score:2)