Nomad Jukebox 3 Officially Out 254
An Anonymous Coward writes: "It seems that the long awaited Jukebox 3 is officially out. Features include time scaling, to play files at different speeds without affecting pitch, multichannel effects, optical input, wireless remote and two battery ports. Probably not an iPod killer yet, although it has many, many more features and welcome firewire port. Now when will this thing be available?"
Paid Avertisment??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashvertisement (Score:1)
maybe (Score:1)
I really don't understand (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I really don't understand (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I really don't understand (Score:1)
why people buy mp3 players shaped like cd players; the circular design is not nearly as convanient as a small rectangle. is there something I'm missing here?
rounded appliances don't crack as easily as square ones when you drop them?
Re:I really don't understand (Score:1)
i doubt it would be true anyways tho
Re:I really don't understand (Score:1)
Re:I really don't understand (Score:3, Insightful)
Looking at the software side the Nomad device looks pretty febble. You still have to download software into the thing. The Archos device is just a USB hard drive that will attempt to play any file with a .mp3 extension if you tell it to.
There are a bunch of drawbacks with the Archos. First the idiots hardwired the batteries into the case. So even though the batteries are standard AA NiMh batteries you have to carry arround a screwdriver and void your warranty to change them. I get about 4 hours actual use from the things so I often want to change batteries in mid flight and I doubt my scrwdriver is compatible with the new security regulations.
It would be much better if Archos et al adopted a common standard form factor for a smallish LiIon battery. Nikon have already developed a camera battery in a form factor that matches one of the new alkaline battery form factors.
The other problem with the archos is that mine skips tracks frequently and often. It is just not robust enough. It appears that errors or what it thinks are errors in the mp3 encoding cause the thing to stop playing.
The other problem with the archos is that the numbskulls have a 20Mb version and a 6Mb version that records but no 20Mb version that records. Also it is not apparent whether the recording version has a microphone input so that it can be used as a dictation machine. The guys appear to be concentrating on the MP3 market and ignoring the tens of millions of people who buy dictation machines. I would like to be able to dictate into the machine and then play back the recording into dragon dictate or Office XP for analysis.
Re:I really don't understand (Score:3)
You are either a pathalogical liar or you have a different model to mine. Mine quite definitely requires a 6 point star screwdriver to open it, plus it has a notice to the effect over one screw that states opening it will void the warranty. Having opened up the case I can assure folk that there is no simple means of access. It is possible to pry apart the rubber doohdads on the corners but doing so puts a lot of pressure on parts that are clearly not made to stand it.
If the manual says no user servicable parts I for one am inclined to accept that. My device came with the batteries inserted.
If you owned an Archos, you'd know that the batteries used are indeed standard, run-of-the-mill rechargeable 1.2V NiMH AA batteries;
Gee, can't read either, I said it would be good if there was a standard form factor for Lithium Ion, I know that the batteries are NiMH.
I know that the unit claims 8 hours use, my experience using the piece of shit is that the claims are untrue.
since you'd need to be carrying around charged NiMH batteries (which don't hold a charge for all that long, if not being used), because regular 1.5 volt batteries would destroy the player.
As for batteries that do not hold charge if unused, I would hope that they would at least last long enough for an in flight change over. I seriously doubt that the type of battery would matter unless you tried to charge an alkaline battery.
Mod me up!
The guy is peddling flamebait.
Re:I really don't understand (Score:2)
Then maybe if you were a bit more courteous and did not begin the way you did you would not have had your post modded into oblivion.
My archos device is most probably earlier than yours. It shiped with a warning to upgrade the firmware because the stuff it shipped with was faulty. The newer models do not look very different though.
If Archos ship the device with a warning that you can't change the batteries I am tempted to take them at face value. I tend not to expect consumer gadgets to take more than a PhD in Nuclear Physics (which I have) to work out how to change the damn batteries.
As for being please with the thing, I would be much more pleased if 1) Archos had actually told people you can change the batteries instead of telling them you can't and 2) the thing did not skip tracks so often.
Of course it is possible I bought a unit that turns out to be a lemon and I should get another.
Having applied injudicious voltages to a wide range of hardware over the years I am not aware that hard drives are especially sensitive to overvoltage. Of course I have not done so recently and the hard drives for portables may indeed be hypersensitive, I am inclined to doubt this however. The only component likely to be especially sensitive would be the read head which probably has a whole rack of conditioning circuitry surrounding it.
Re:I really don't understand (Score:2)
That is new then , I looked only last month.
However the MP3 recorder is clearly not the device to go for now, look at the media player, it is a much better device, it has the microphone input etc and can be used to store and view image files from a camera.
Only yet again the dweebs have opted for a 10Gb disk instead of 20, like people are going to buy now when there will be a bigger one out pretty soon.
The device also uses Lithium ion batteries, but yet again no apparent means of using a spare battery, could get anoying when the battery goes soft.
So with archos doing genuinely interesting stuff, why do we get the puff piece for the creative junk that offers nothing new except a slightly bigger disk???
Re:I really don't understand (Score:2, Insightful)
And, yes, note that the iPod, which also contains a hard drive, is rectangular.
RIAA reaction time (Score:1)
Steve Jobs... (Score:2, Funny)
...because I still want an iPod over this thing!
Actually, this thing is great, certainly better than the first two (of which I never really liked), but it's still too large to be truly portable.
Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:5, Interesting)
Just wondering, I guess....
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:4, Funny)
Re: for those too lazy to click on the link (Score:2)
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:1)
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:4, Interesting)
As someone who has sent a product [slimdevicies.com] to Slashdot for review, let me tell you that this is *not* how it works. These guys like gadgets, and they consider product announcements to be worthy of "news for nerds". Judging by the number of comments attached these stories, most slashdot readers agree. That's why you see a lot of MP3 and PVR related stories.
We didn't pay slashdot to review the SliMP3. All cmdrTaco got out of it was a free prototype. I wasn't even the one who submitted the original story about my project. Somebody just found us on the web, and submitted a story. That's usually how slshdot works. If that weren't the case, you wouldn't see the slashdot effect - don't you think sites would prepare for the traffic if they knew a story was coming out?
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:2)
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:2)
Oh wait... never mind...
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:1)
Re:Did Nomad Pay for This? (Score:2)
Pretty fishy, especially after this almost duplicate story [slashdot.org] posted just the other day?
Hmmmmmm...
no vorbis? (Score:2, Insightful)
better luck next time, creative.
Exactly (Score:2)
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
The only likely scenario would be an existing MP3 ASIC manufacturer adding vorbis support to their product. At least that wouldn't require (much) more space on the circuit board.
Re:Exactly (Score:2, Informative)
To help in making a fixed pont Ogg codec, see: http://sourceforge.net/projects/ivdev
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Re:Exactly (Score:1, Interesting)
Portal players use integers.
There aren't integer vorbis decoders that are free (beer or speech).
Re:Exactly (Score:1)
See this thread [xiph.org] for details.
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Informative)
I bet the hardware manufacturers would love to implement Ogg- I doubt they like paying licensing fees to Microsoft and Franhofer (sp?) for WMA and MP3 licenses.
I believe the Ogg guy(s) are working on a decoding algorithm that doesn't require floating-point math. I'm out of touch with Ogg land though... check their site.
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Re:no vorbis? (Score:2)
I guess I'll have to wait.
Re:no vorbis? (Score:1)
Probably because only 1% of the people they're marketing it to actually want it, so it's not worth the effort for them to put it in.
It's like going to Ford, and asking why the hell their cars don't support MiniDisc. (Which I personally love.)
That, and Ogg Vorbis NEEDS A NEW NAME BEFORE IT'S EVEN MARKETABLE!
Actually, a phone call from most /.ers.... (Score:2)
What the hell is SB1394? (Score:2)
AKA FireWire/iLINK.
Anyone else find it funny that the non apple version is called 'iLINK'?
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:1)
so everyone comes out with their own name.
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:1)
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:1)
I thought so.
Do you think sony trademarked iLINK just to pissoff apple?
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:2)
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:2)
Oh, actually i hadn't even noticed that -- you're right, that is pretty funny!
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:2)
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:1)
The only people that call it iLink [sony.com] are Sony.
Firewire [apple.com] is mostly an Apple term, although it doesn't seem to be exclusive to them.
SB1394 just means that it passed Creative's "comprehensive SB1394 Certification evaluation" (which is just marketing-speak for saying that it works with the ports on their SoundBlaster cards).
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:1)
Re:What the hell is SB1394? (Score:2)
Total cost to Canadians... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:2, Interesting)
Then you can let the tarrif be a bygone. I know it doesn't work in the long run (because they probaly will then rewrite the law to close that loophole) and also because it doesn't address the tarrif for CD-R/W discs.
But mostly, you guys over that imaginary line called "border" have my fullest sympathy, and encourage you guys to do what you can before this rediculous-ness catches on here in the good ol' US of RIAA.
------------------
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:2)
My guess is never. Or, at least, a very long time. The market is considerably smaller in Canada. The money expended to protect a potential market is better spent on inproving products in an already-competitive market in the US. It's just the economics of it.
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:1)
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:2)
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:2)
Dont like it? See my
BTW: if you live in Windsor, ON: Caboto club @ 19:00 all candidates for the by-election.
Im OTW now, only stopped to reply to this Torontonian.
Re:Total cost to Canadians... (Score:1)
I wonder if the battery life is really that good (Score:2)
Also, can it act as a normal hard drive?
I just wish the empeg group of SonicBlue would release a hard drive portable player. But with the Riot out, it dosen't look overly promising to have a linux hackable MP3 portable player anytime soon. The iPod is nice, but I doubt it will just get OGG support, dynamic compression, a web server, and other interesting features hacked into it. OGG support on the empeg-car will be so nice.
Re:I wonder if the battery life is really that goo (Score:1)
yes. it must not mount as a normal portable hard disk in windows, though. it comes with the "creative file manager" app for transferring non-music files to/from the device.
there's one bullet about this on the features page [nomadworld.com] ("Creative File Manager - Use the player as a portable storage device").
Re:I wonder if the battery life is really that goo (Score:2, Informative)
www.nomadness.net (Score:2, Informative)
Alternative third-party software for the Jukebox (Score:2, Interesting)
It provides full Windows Explorer integration, access to the Jukebox via a built-in webserver, and search and report generation features using a built-in SQL database.
There's a free trial version [redchairsoftware.com]. Notmad Explorer is also mentioned in the first full review of the Jukebox3 at TBREAK.com [tbreak.com].
8,000 songs (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:8,000 songs (Score:2, Informative)
Memory
16MB DRAM buffer
20GB hard drive storage (333 hours at 128kbps MP3 encoding)
Re:8,000 songs (Score:2, Funny)
eh? (Score:1)
OK, that confused me at first. (I thought 'out' meant it was 'available')
Re:eh? (Score:1)
You'd think that a geek would know the product lifecycle...
Vaporware! (Score:1)
Ogg Vorbis player (Score:1, Offtopic)
I've converted most of my CDs to Ogg already,
and getting rid of the mp3 formats.
While we're at it, please make one for my car
too, will ya?
Still no Ogg Vorbis (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm aware that Ogg Vorbis hasn't reached 1.0 yet, but still, you'd think they could include support for it pretty easily. Anyone know if you can upgrade the software on these things? Their site doesn't mention anything about it.
Look at the size of that thing (Score:1)
Re:Look at the size of that thing (Score:1)
Microdrives don't hold as much as laptop drives...is there even a 20GB microdrive? If there were, I'd guess it'd cost Creative over $500 per device, meaning the Nomad would cost close to $1500 MSRP. I may love music, but that's a bit steep for a dedicated portable device, no?
So it comes down to price vs. capacity. Want big drives, buy a Nomad or other device that uses a laptop drive. Want a small device? Buy an iPod.
Required equipment not included??? (Score:2, Informative)
Microsoft® Windows® 98 (Second Edition required for SB1394 transfer)/2000/Me/XP
Intel® Pentium II 233MHz or AMD K6®-2 266MHz (Pentium III450MHz or higher recommended for MP3 encoding)
SVGA graphics adapter (256 colors, 800x600)
Internet connection for Internet content downloading or CDDB® support (any charges incurred are the responsibility of the end user)
64MB RAM (128MB recommended)
USB or SB1394 port (found on Sound Blaster® Audigy(TM) series of audio cards)
30MB free hard disk space (more for audio content storage)
Installed Mouse
Sound Blaster® Audigy(TM), Extigy(TM) or Live! for EAX® enhanced MP3 encoding
CD-ROM drive with digital audio extraction support
end thieved content from NOMAD page
I have to buy a new SOUNDCARD to use this thing? I just got my 5.1 Platinum six months ago. I'm not sure a lot of people are going to be up for paying $100 for a new card just to be able to use "SB 1394."
I can get an 10GB iPod with XDrive for under $450. Yes, the storage site is only 10GB, but with true Firewire I can shift files on and off in minutes rather than the hours USB1 takes.
Come on Creative, give us REAL Firewire support!
Re:Required equipment not included??? (Score:1)
However adding functionality to said player with certain cards means at least a couple power users are destined to plunk down a bit of extra change for one.
Re:Required equipment not included??? (Score:3, Informative)
it should work with any other IEEE1394 card you might have.
Re:Required equipment not included??? (Score:1)
If nothing else, this thing also says it has a USB interface, and 1394 is 1394 - no matter what marketting name is applied to it.
Re:Required equipment not included??? (Score:2, Informative)
Wow, the Creative marketing dept passed math (Score:2, Informative)
ika:/home/derek> bc
8000*80
640000
5000*128
640000
Derek
Does it play oggs? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Almost my entire music collection is in oggs now.
Yet Another Non-Ogg Player (Score:1)
Re:Yet Another Non-Ogg Player (Score:2)
but it is enough. there may be
I suspect most people wind up with windows media files more by accident (because the media encoder does them by default) than because they know anything about the format...
Buy a bunch (Score:1)
$Ch-ching$
In other news..... (Score:1)
No wireless remote I could find (Score:1)
So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:5, Insightful)
-iPod is way smaller.
-iPod software (iTunes) rocks.
-The iPod is a pretty rugged little box.
-Proven to be extensible.
-Works as a standard IEEE 1394 external disk.
Reasons the Nomad rules over the iPod:
-Holds 20Gb of MP3 data (as opposed to iPod's 5 or 10GB).
-You can add a second battery and double the life to 22 hours. The iPod only is good for 10 or so.
-Safe assumption - the Nomad works better with Windows, no 3rd party software needed. No Linux drivers for either.
-Both USB _and_ 1394 on board. Hopefully the port isn't some kind of funky "almost-standard" version.
Reasons the Nomad may kind of suck anyways:
-Size. Why make it look like a CD player if it relies on a hard drive?
-Ruggedness - every Nomad I've seen yet has been kind of flimsy. Until proven otherwise, I'll assume this one is, too.
- It uses a Sound Blaster for "enhanced MP3 encoding". Requiring an add-on product for best results is lame. Though I guess to some a Mac is an add-on product for an iPod...
Pun intended? (Score:4, Funny)
yes, LAME is an add-on product that will produce the best mp3 results...
Re:So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:1)
Re:So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:2)
psxndc
Re:So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:2)
psxndc
Re:So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:2)
The SoundBlaster Audigy has both dedicated hardware for MP3 encoding and a firewire port. It is one of the few, if not the only, sound card to provide these features.
Re:I actually chose the Nomad2 over the IPod.... (Score:2)
To quite a few people, myself included, the one drawback to the Nomad2 that killed its chances was that it could only interface over USB. Transferring even 5 or 10GB over USB is painfully slow compared to FireWire. However, with FireWire capability, the Nomad3 is a real option in my eyes now.
Re:So, to sum it up vs. the iPod.... (Score:2)
Most other portable devices use 2.5" laptop-type hard drives - the 1.8" is still a relatively new design, and pricier than the 2.5" mechanisms (though dropping fast). Assuming the Nomad uses a 2.5" disk, you could wedge a 48 or 60GB disk into it, provided it doesn't need the super-slim drives.
I have just under two days' music ripped on my TiBook - it takes up 3.5GB (mostly at 160k, some of it's at 192k). If and when I got an iPod, it'd have to be a 10GB model if I wanted to have any serious room left on it.
But, given that we're talking about $500 worth of scratch for it, I'll pass for now. $500 can buy a _lot_ of diapers, and that'll be a much better use of the money for us in a couple of months!
I'd still rather have an iPod... (Score:1)
in reply to the ogg trolls (Score:3, Interesting)
so? it is a mp3 player, not a ogg vorbis player. note the key word, mp3.
ogg is open source, which is nice. but not too many people use it, that don't read slashdot anyways.
get over it.
wait about 2 or 3 years, and they will come. when was napster really popular? 1999? how many portable mp3 players were available then that had more than 1 GB of storage?
Archos vs. Nomad (Score:2)
Re:Archos vs. Nomad (Score:2)
I've never had any problems with mine, and you are the second person I've ever heard of having problems with a Archos Jukebox. It must be a fluke. (I hope it's a fluke, as I'm getting the 20 GB Recorder as soon as I can find one)
Mac support? (Score:2)
I just love it when a company takes Apple technology (firewire) and then doesn't support the Mac.
Linux Software (Score:2)
libnjb [sourceforge.net] is a fantastic Linux library for interfacing with the Nomad Jukebox. There are lots of links that take you to software.
out??? not quite. (Score:2)
As of 17:22 Tuesday (PDT) it's not on:
Creative's online shop [nomadworld.com]
Amazon's "Nomad Jukebox"... All Results [amazon.com] page
Any even of my local retailers (check here) [nomadworld.com].
I'd really be interested if anyone could tell me where to get one online.
Cheers!
"audiophile"? (Score:2)
Is it just me, or are they deliberately making fun of so-called audiophiles? "Enjoy audiophile quality playback anywhere" and "5000 songs at 128kbps" send two very, very different messages. I'm not an audiophile (I spent around $50 on my stereo receiver), or even someone who puts much effort into mp3 encoding... and I found 192 to be the range where my sucky hearing stopped detecting problems.
So are they going after audiophiles, or are they going after losers who believe Creative hype about what audiophiles use, need, and buy? For that matter, given Creative's history, why am I even asking this question? :-)
Bah. As soon as they or Rio start posting the weight of their devices when they begin the hype, instead of doing their best to make it look small, I'll pay attention. Until then, I know without picking one up that it's not what I want.
Nomad 3 Review (Score:3, Informative)
But does the UI still suck? (Score:2, Informative)
Not to mention that the interface menus are laid out inconsistently, and it has two modes you have to switch back and forth between just to create a playlist. The physical button layout is very inergonomic and difficult to manipulate without looking while driving.
I just took my Nomad on a road trip and I honestly had to spend several minutes explaining the interface to my friend (an engineer) just so he could operate it while I was driving. In terms of ease-of-use, it's the exact opposite of an iPod. By the end of the trip we were ready to chuck the thing into the Grand Canyon.
The point of this tirade: don't waste your money on a Nomad 3, at least not unless they've spent a lot of time improving what must be one of the worst interfaces ever designed.
Oh, and I forgot to mention that the unit locks up playing some mp3's (possibly the mp3's had encoding errors, but still...), and the Creative PlayCenter software you use to download songs crashes constantly when transferring, even after several upgrades to both it and the Nomad firmware.
Re:Creative, here's how to increase your sales... (Score:2)
1. USB audio profile, making it an extigy.
2. Small host software to select songs on the
connected computer using the jukebox.
2. Firewire external storage.
Re:Ogg ogg ogg (Score:2)
>> "Another good thing going to the Jukebox 3 is the upgradeable firmware meaning possible support for more audio formats like Ogg Vorbis."
I think every player out there has said this. It's in the boilerplate promo kit that is sold by hardware based digital audio companies everywhere. Bottom line is to read between the lines --- "If we really wanted to support OGG we would out of the box -- but by saying that it is possible in the future we move 10% more units, then so be it, because the lifecycle for an individuale portable mp3 model (in the marketplace) is akin to a 2001 calendar in December of said year...."