iPAQ AutoMP3 Jukebox How-to 71
Ralph Cottenham writes: "tinytechnews has just put the finishing touches on its first how-to article; a complete MP3 jukebox in your vehicle with a sleek interface provided by the Compaq iPAQ. This article shows you how to use your iPAQ PocketPC to supply your favorite music wherever you go." A lot of the "how-to" work here is accomplished by adding an external hard drive to the iPAQ (running Windows, not GNU/Linux) with Addonics' PocketEX enclosure and an IBM diskdrive, but consideration is also given to various ways to pipe the sound into a car stereo system.
Re:A better way (Score:1)
Re:All very well, but... (Score:2)
I'm thinking of doing the same thing, provided I can find a cheap laptop, as mine is still too new to stick in the trunk of my car. to control the player I would use a ir remote, with the receiver in one corner in the rear window, one of those LCDs 20x2 to view the song info somewhere in the dashboard, and the output connected into the cd changer inputs of my car stereo. so.. anyone having a cheap p90 for sale?
pedro cardoso
nipjc at ua dot pt
- too lazy to login and have a sig
Archos 6G player (Score:3)
it's a lot cheaper, too.
Archos Website [archos.com]
east_bay_pete
iPAQ AutoMP3 Jukebox How-to..... (Score:4)
Re:Rich kid's idiotic rambling... (Score:1)
Well said brother and it's only $549 for 20gig.
Nope, it's only $468 [pcstop.com] now. =)
I'm gonna second this... the PJB-100 is the only way to fly. And they've got a 30GB version on the way. At this rate I'll soon be able to put all 45GB of my collection on it. =)
Re:Or (Score:1)
What about an RF transmitting system? I've never heard one to know how the audio quality is, but I know a number of CD changers can broadcast to some unused channel. That would make it easy to move the player from the car to another location, no hard-wired stuff.
What about converting an old desktop to a car ster (Score:2)
Re:Or (Score:1)
If you're just going to use it in your car, this isn't the best thing, but the article overlooks the best reason to use an iPAQ and enclosed drive: you can use it without the car. It has its own battery, so you can drop it in your bag and walk around with 40GB of music. (IBM has a low power 40GB 12.5mm 2.5" drive.)
I'm going this route as soon as the 2-slot PCMCIA sleve comes out so I can have a microdrive for OS and buffer and keep the big drive spun down most of the time.
Re:name vs. number (Score:1)
If you are looking to pick one song followed by another completely random-access, then of course you are right.
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the telephone rings / problem between screen and chair / thoughts of homocide
Re:All very well, but... (Score:3)
Kenwood now make a $450 headunit that will play CDROMs of MP3s as well as regular CDs, anyway, so the utility of a lot of these things is fading. The UI is a bit basic so far, and they don't have a changer that can deal with data yet, but it's a good first step.
Or, the PhatNoise (http://www.phatnoise.com/CAS.htm) when it's finally done, gets you an MP3 changer compatible with your existing head unit, which is especially handy if you have one of those 'built into the whole dash' things, like Audi, Alfa and Vauxhall do.
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the telephone rings / problem between screen and chair / thoughts of homocide
Aternate system with Palm V and linux box in trunk (Score:1)
http://boxster.sixpak.org/mp3/ [sixpak.org]
Re: Rich kid's idiotic rambling... (Score:2)
Re:Archos 6G player (Score:2)
http://www.bestbuy.com/detail.asp?e=11030956&m=
Quality (Score:1)
Only problem is, it reproduces the sound so faithfully and clear that now I can hear all the artifacts of the MP3 compression, even at 160kbps. Sigh. Still, I've found it to be worth every penny.
By the way, empeg's customer support kicks ass! They are the one tech company I've dealt with that leaves me smiling after contacting support. You won't regret buying an empeg. Or Rio Car or whatever they're called now. They're great! Go get one! Buy buy buy!
Hardware: FSF Endorses Ogg/Vorbis with BSD License (Score:3)
Given the interest hardware manufacturers have expressed in OggVorbis (remember, they could well take the brunt of the hit when the royalty demands for MP3 start rolling in), I would be very surprised if many, perhaps even most, hardware players aren't supporting both MP3 and OggVorbis in the near future.
What makes you think music company will allow it? (Score:1)
LL
Re:A better way (Score:1)
And, while BeOS is for the most part, dead, it still works and works *great* for this kind of application.
Re:name vs. number (Score:1)
This is exactly what I do with my CD/MP3 player - each disc is loosly genre-based, sometimes with full albums, sometimes with mixed tracks. I do keep index cards in the CD slot that just outline what track number each album/mix starts with, so I can skip around if I need to. Very easy, and no more dangerous than searching for tracks on a regular CD.
Re:Possible Future How-To's (Score:1)
My next addition was going to be wireless networking, but I may have to rethink.
Re:Or (Score:1)
Some of us drive quite a bit and need more music than can fit on a CD. 640 megabytes: thats about 20 songs at decent sounding bit rate.
I'm sure you are aware that if you do a search on napster, etc. Most of the songs with be 128kpbs and the better quality ones are 160-192.
This means that the majority of people find this type of bit rate acceptable to listen too.
For instance the new Weezer albulm at 192kpbs takes up 41 megs.
So I could store this 16 times over on a CDR. This is a relatively short cd (less than 40 minutes I believe, 10 songs).
Putting only 20 mp3's on a CDR is basically utter BS, that is why this is flaimbait! But I am sure you already knew that.
A better way (Score:3)
Re:An alternative (Score:1)
Better alternative: (Score:1)
2. XMMS
3. That xmms plugin that lets you control it via a palm
4. a power adapter for your palm.
Re:Can be done equally easy using Linux... (Score:1)
Can be done equally easy using Linux... (Score:4)
Instructions for loading Linux on the iPAQ can be found here: http://familiar.handhelds.org/familiar/releases/l
Die out? Not anytime soon (Score:3)
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Or (Score:3)
Re:#35 is one of the funniest posts I've ever seen (Score:2)
Possible Future How-To's (Score:5)
Can you say "Overkill"?
Re:iPAQ AutoMP3 Jukebox How-to..... (Score:1)
Maybe you should try some education, so you are become a better employee than the average Indian person?
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Why spend $1000 when... (Score:1)
Aiwa CDC-MP3 [aiwa.com]
Aiwa CDC-MP32 [aiwa.com]
Re:Or (Score:1)
It sure is cool to have an MP3-player in your car, but I don't get the stir on this either. My brother, who's got two left hands, bought a Yepp, made a clamp for it and connected it to his car radio. Nothing special, works fine.
#35 is one of the funniest posts I've ever seen (Score:1)
Or (Score:2)
The slashdot 2 minute between postings limit: /.'ers since Spring 2001.
Pissing off hyper caffeineated
Re:Or (Score:2)
The slashdot 2 minute between postings limit: /.'ers since Spring 2001.
Pissing off hyper caffeineated
Re:Or (Score:2)
The slashdot 2 minute between postings limit: /.'ers since Spring 2001.
Pissing off hyper caffeineated
All you need is... (Score:2)
Easiest Mass-Storage Solution (Score:1)
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Re:Or (Score:2)
I normally carry around a mobile phone, the wallet, keys, and a pen. If i'd be wearing a palm as well, i'm prety sure i couldnt make room for a Rio too. Adding MP3 functionality to the mobile phone is an excelent idea, imho, the same goes for the palm.
Re:All very well, but... (Score:1)
Not a bad plan, I've got an old Panasonic stereo with a remote, but no CD changer for it. I could probably use that. It's even got velcro to stick it to the dashboard.
All very well, but... (Score:3)
I found that a good solution is to make up a playlist long enough for the journey I'm making, start it off, then just let it play.
"Dark Side of the Moon" is just long enough for my drive home at night - from "... bumbump Bumbump BUMBUMP" to "As a matter of fact, there is no dark side..." is roughly the 44 miles at motorway speed, at 8pm...
Geek girls? (Score:1)
Re:Or (Score:2)
An alternative (Score:2)
Why not buy a MD player with LP4 compression? I know this doesn't play MP3's but you get a very small and sexy machine [minidisc.org] with long playback time on only one battery and 4 albums on one MD.
Of course, it doesn't beat mp3's compression but the cd-mp3 players out there at the moment don't handle knocks very well and look very cheap and plasticy.
As soon as I've saved up, that will be what I'll be doing. Yes it would be nice to run mp3's from an ipaq but the battery life on one of those things is low enough as it is, without hammering it playing music.
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Re:Die out? Not anytime soon (Score:1)
Re:A better way (Score:3)
This one is penguin-powered, too, which I think is pretty cool, since I wouldn't want to spend another $90 on an operating system for my car stereo. Please consider Ogg Vorbis [vorbis.com] though; MP3 is patent-encumbered and I'd like to see it die out.
Unfortunately, it's still gonna be spendy no matter how you do it. The parts and prices listed in the article are a little bit outdated, but the system they built cost about $1200 I think...
It would hold a helluva lot of music, though, and you'd be very popular with the Geek girls. ;-)
iPAQ Linux alternative - Scream (Score:2)
Scream is written in python, utilizing pygtk and libglade. I've just added Icecast support with Shoutcast support forthcoming.
Scream is available at http://cvs.handhelds.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/scre
Over the weekend, I used it for 3+ hours in my car on a roadtrip usingt a cassette adapater available at Radio Shack (tunes on microdrive). Worked well for my purposes.
License is GPL.
Looks like more than the iPac is (Score:1)
Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error '80040e4d'
[Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access Driver] Too many client tasks.
/inc_top.asp, line 15
Correction (Score:1)
IDE connecter. Let me hook up a filesystem on an IBM microdrive. 20 or 30 gigs of music from a laptop filesystem would be sweet. I haven't seen a commercial device that does this yet.
Just an FYI, the microdrives use a flashcard interface, not IDE. As a bonus, it is actually a lot easier to set these interfaces up as IDE requires a good deal of extra electronics while flashcard barely requires pinouts.
Re:All your MS server are been Slashdotted (Score:1)
"I am a negative Karma whore"
Re:A better way (Score:1)
Somthing like that I would more likely agree with.
Ive had 2 people I care about get seriously f*$#$% up in car accidents because of stoopid distractions. Something more oriented around the driver seems much more worthy.
Re:A better way (Score:2)
Re:Or (Score:1)
Re:A better way (Score:1)
Re:All very well, but... (Score:1)
You can also get numeric keypads that plug into a serial port; there are only 17 buttons on that, which is a smaller number of controls than on my in-car CD player/radio. The controls would obviously depends on personal taste and back-end player, but it would be quite easy to remove and blank out some keys if you didn't map functions to all of them and wanted a simple control panel.
It would be easier to mount in an accessible place too.
GNU/Linux thanks Timothy (Score:1)
Re:Or (Score:1)
Re:Or (Score:1)
The few I've looked at (20 albums is fine for work) sound like cheap "give away" portable radios, so a better bit rate wouldn't help them anyway. I've ripped most of my CD collection already, somewhere upward of 2000 CD's. I've got a 20 gig drive at work that I swap songs in and out of from my home collection and play through a set of decent headphones. I want to do something similar in my car. I'd like to buy a 20 or 30 gig IBM laptop drive and hook it up. No device currently lets me do this other than a few kits that suffer from a lack of directory structure.
Re:Or (Score:2)
The main problem with all of the commercial devices is that they're cheap pieces of crap and don't do what I think they should be able to do. By and large they're the equivalent of CD players you find in deep discount stores.
What I really want, and so far nobody has delivered (at least in one piece of hardware) is this:
Re:Or (Score:2)
name vs. number (Score:1)
It really depends how you organize your songs, whether it is as safe as a changer, but if you read things while choosing songs, it would be much more dangerous.
Heh - save your money. (Score:1)
Seriously though - I've got a Phillips MP3 CD player which I highly recomend - first it lasts longer then the Ipaq (I don't know about the travelstar, but the IBM Microdrive you can listen to about 2 hours of music with the built in batteries and the external battery in the pcmcia sleeve) but you can get it for 125$ and it comes with a car kit so all you have to do is plug it all in. And it works like a top - and it lasts about 8-10 hours on two AA batteries.
Re:An alternative (Score:1)
First you have to record all your songs to it - one at a time, and if you don't have a digital sound card heaven help you because you have to adjust the line level for each song.
Second the R90 (I don't know about the MZR900) has some of the slowest seek times in the world - it takes over 10 seconds just to skip tracks. And if you close the door with no disk in it - it takes about 15 seconds to tell you that.
With a real mp3 player its all just drap and drop. I've got an ipaq and a mp3 cd player (phillips) - if you want to listen to mp3 files get an mp3 player. The Phillips mp3 cd player lasts about 8-10 hours and thats over 200+ tracks per disk - plus it has a 100 second esp - I've never had the thing skip. My only complain is the size (cds are kinda bulky!)
I think the mini-disc recorders are best suited for recording tapes, live stuff, and cds to md.
Re:Or (Score:1)
Re:There's a cheeper way, and a less fidjity too (Score:1)
Re:Archos 6G player (Score:1)
Even cooler! (Score:1)
Re:Windows? (Score:1)
El Cheapo Car Computer (Score:2)
I'm using WinMe of all the horrible things, just because it was quick and simple (anyone can build a player like mine). I use WinAMP with a Joystick plugin and the resumer plugin, and a removable hard-drive bay with an old 6GB drive. The only things I needed to buy were:
A device like the iPAQ player is nice, but for $1000, I could totally Mack-out my Winblowz standard machine, which fits under the seat in my Corolla. And, it doesn't require you to look at it! I just alphabetically sort my playlists, and use the joystick to traverse tracks 1 or 10 at a time; a lot safer while driving! If I ever want a display, I can add any RCA video-input screen later, and it'll just be for convenience, not required.
Re:Or (Score:1)
just buy an indash (Score:1)
they also play regular compact discs
kenwood has had one out for a year and a half