iRiver Announces A New Ogg/MP3 Player 231
An anonymous reader writes "CD Freaks and Mobile mag are reporting that iRiver has unveiled a new Ogg-capable mp3 player. Featuring 20 GB of HD space and USB 2.0 connectivity, the iHP-120 might just be the answer to the question all us Apple-fearing geeks have been asking...
Although the new product has yet to show up on their website, the older model iHP-100 is similar in design but with half the storage space (10gb). New software will be released in October to update it and other players from iRiver with ogg compatibility as well."
Not necessarily a godsend (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
F.F.S., they had the chance to produce a rival product to the iPod, then just killed it with crippled software? What were they thinking.
I'm looking for an iPod at the moment, expencive though they are. It would have been nice to see more choice, but you just can't sell an OGG player with "protection" and expect people to buy it
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
http://www.digitallyunique.net/digitally-unique
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
http://www.compuplus.com/insidepage.php3?refer=
Not too bad.
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
But it is funny to see all the folks complaining that the iPod is too pricey, then drooling over the more expensive iRiver.
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not necessarily a godsend (Score:2)
Er, no you don't. Tons of mp3s on mine. Why do you think people bought these before the iMusic store existed, out of passing curiosity?
Nice timing... (Score:5, Funny)
No wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Person downloading 20gb of pirated music, 0gb legal.
2. Person downloading 15gb of pirated music, 5gb legal.
3. Person downloading 10gb of pirated music, 0gb legal.
Legally, it's 1-2-3. Morally, I'd disagree with that order. And I doubt #2 is willing to sign any "amnesty", even if he's a good customer of the recording companies. In fact, by any standard I see among my friends, I'd say he'd be a premium customer. Only the RIAA play it blind - they only see what's being pirated, and so they are just as likely to drive him into the ground as the other two.
The RIAA can dream about their magic customer #4, that never pirates anything and purchases everything legally. Judging by friends, family, class mates, co-workers and people I meet on the Internet, they'll be very few. Even old dogs seem to be learning new tricks. Strike down all but those and you'll also strike down the majority of the market. And the market doesn't like being treated like criminals - even if they by the letter of the law are.
Kjella
P.S. Regrading the use of the word criminal, since the US has defined "sharing for getting other works in return" as commercial gain, I think most sharing would fall under criminal statutes, not civil. The difference lies more in evidence, compuer logs don't establish who was in front of the machine. While it's probably enough for a civil case, I doubt it'd hold in a criminal case...
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Don't know how representative that is, but there it is.
[1] Just ran `find
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Seeing replies to your posts. One of the reason that many people ignore ACs is that you usually can't have a conversation with them. Logged in users get told about replies and get a link to view them directly.
As for the music, I've got a lot of my own rips, but I've also downloaded everything I had on tape or record. Technically it's a violation but that's something I don't feel hurts anyone. I paid for the song, I'm listening to the song.
Creepy! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Creepy! (Score:4, Funny)
Firmware update? (Score:3, Funny)
RTFA? RTFS! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Firmware update? (Score:2)
FLAC (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:FLAC (Score:2, Funny)
Where exactly do you use a *portable* player that is accoustically sound anyways? The bus? The subway? The streets?
Simply...must...be....a...drop...buzzword....le
Next you will be going on about the airbags on the new JTF fighters....
Tom
Re:FLAC (Score:2)
A good hard disk recorder with a good amount of storage, lossle
Re:FLAC (Score:2)
Actually, usually in the places I play (churches or small concert halls) having a few (50 or so) enhances the sound considerably, getting rid of a lot of the boominess that those sorts of locations tend to have.
Of course, you probably didn't expect me to be playing harpsichord like I do...
In any case, the higher quality storage isn't due to the impeccable recording quality that I always get, because you're right - it usually blows chunks, since I don'
My Empeg does OGG (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My Empeg does OGG (Score:2)
Re:FLAC (Score:2)
Re:FLAC (Score:2)
rio karma too (Score:5, Informative)
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
If I can just copy my Ogg files over using standard networking (NFS, SMB, heck, even FTP) I will buy one of these. If I have to run some special jukebox thing that does a secret DRM handshake, I'll pass.
steveha
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
steveha
Re:rio karma too (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry, none of these portable plays have significantly good analog stages to make lossless output worth anything. Maybe one will come out with a good digital output, but that still will need to have an external DAC.
Plus, using a lossless format really hampers the amount of music that you can store on such a device.
20gb of MP3 = 15000+ hours of music (200+ CDs avg 50min/cd)
20gb of lossless = 4000 hours of music (80+ CDs avg 50min/cd)
Why not transcode your music from your lossless
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
No, using your analogy, it's like saying, "hey, I need to dig a hole in the garden to plant the seeds for my corn. I think that I'll use my backhoe." When the hole that you need to make could be jus
lossless does have a point (Score:2)
For example, suppose I want to listen to all the presentations given at linux.conf.au 2003 [linux.org.au]. Now, on the CD they're all in Speex format.
This format, I'll note, isn't terribly well supported by hardware players. Also, although some of those presentations are a bit long, I doubt that
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
As for those people who will comment that they get their concert bootlegs as FLAC or SHNs, and they don't want to change them? Why not? MP3s are so small? You'll be able to carry 2-3 times as many concerts with you.
I currently have about 400Gigs of flac/shn's and that is growing. I also have a very highspeed connection at work. I also have a car. I also have a nice home stereo.
With a device like this, I can store my new flacs, listen to them on my way home from work, transfer them
Re:rio karma too (Score:2)
Now, if the moderator in question wants to believe that I'm posting flamebait, that's up to the moderator. However, anyone with a handful of hyperlinks and a calculator can figure out on their own that the iPod is smaller, in that the volume of the unit
Only WIN98SE/ME/2000/XP? (Score:5, Interesting)
Or, maybe, this time again, it means some of us will need to do some reverse-engineering of one more of those primitive tools all these player manufacturers supply...
Re:Only WIN98SE/ME/2000/XP? (Score:2)
That also kind of reminds me of this drive bay internal USB 6-in-1 car
Re:Only WIN98SE/ME/2000/XP? (Score:2)
Re:Only WIN98SE/ME/2000/XP? (Score:2)
-N
Re:Only WIN98SE/ME/2000/XP? (Score:3, Informative)
Cheers,
Costyn.
More details... (Score:3, Informative)
ATTENTION IDIOT MODERATORS (Score:2)
That's nice and all... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's nice and all... (Score:2)
So, yeah... buy an iRiver. You won't be dissapointed.
Cheers,
Costyn.
In RIAA news... (Score:2, Funny)
"We are shocked and awed these college kids would code something that steals from kabillionaire struggling artists and post them on the sickening little iPee's or iPods. Have you seen the name OGG. Wasn't there a ganster rap song called OGG or something. It's a disgrace." stated an RIAA Spokesdevil.
Officials at Vorbis could not be contacted, however, another company stated they will be filing a counter
Excellent... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Excellent... (Score:2)
The Zen is cheaper, but also has a shitty interface.
Re:Depressing thoughts (Score:2)
http://gnomad2.sourceforge.net/
What!? (Score:2, Funny)
This is really (Score:5, Funny)
Very cool. (Score:4, Informative)
There's a Wiki list of (hopefully) all portable Vorbis players at http://wiki.xiph.org/VorbisHardware [xiph.org]. That page has a link to some detailed information [iriver.com] from iRiver about which of their players will support Vorbis.
OGG File Format (Score:4, Informative)
To Xiph, the Ogg name is important. (Score:2)
Thanks for the info, and thanks for supporting Ogg Vorbis. As an aside, in the words of Carsten "Purple" Haese, "it's Ogg, not OGG" [vorbis.com].
Re:there is a portable ogg player but it's not iRi (Score:2)
I bought one and I'm still pissed.
Re:there is a portable ogg player but it's not iRi (Score:2)
So what's the big deal about having to use NDBM? DI supports free software and NDBM is the result. In many respects, it is superior to the Windows-based sync tool that DI provided. With firmware 1.40 and NDBM 1.10, ogg support is quite good. I've used it under Windows, Linux and Solaris with no problems at all.
-h-
Re:there is a portable ogg player but it's not iRi (Score:2)
Re:there is a portable ogg player but it's not iRi (Score:2)
man... the Karma looks sweet, but after looking at that, the one you pointed out as all the looks of a remote control...
Fear Apple? (Score:3, Funny)
From Wester's 3rd New International Dictionary:
fear 4. to have a reverential awe of (e.g., fear of God; God fearing)
Or did you mean afraid of Apple?
recording? (Score:2)
The product web page mentions that it can do realtime mp3 encoding. Can it record to WAVs too? I would be interested in something like that.
Re:recording? (Score:3, Informative)
What is missing, and would be really great, is for the device too encode OGG files as well!
Apple is dying..bsd is dying (Score:2)
Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Unfortunately the line in will only real time encode to MP3's. Rats.... I hope it does a reasonable job encoding. Getting church programs for distrubition on CD's just got simpler. The device shows up on USB like an external drive.. Nice! Archos has a competitor.
maybe in the next upgrade they will have an OGG encoder....
Found Specs (Score:2)
The Nordic Site... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.irivernordic.com/products.php?pid=21
Good to see some competition (Score:2)
iRiver: 60 x 105x 19 mm @ 160g
Sooo, at last someone else figured out that 2.5" drives were NOT the way to go (Archos anyone?
Though, from the picture, the navigation menu looks horrible. What is this "/root/030314/" stuff anyway? Am I supposed to type "pwd && ls" each time I want to see an album, or what?
Maybe they're trying to appeal to geeks here (or they don't want to bother writing software), but hey, the Archos had
Re:Good to see some competition (Score:2)
As for the navigation system, if it works anything like the cd-based iRiver mp350 (an EXCELLENT cd based mp3 player; I *love* mine), the stu
I'll just wait for the firmware... (Score:2)
Anyway, back to my original point... iriver releases firmware updates on a fairly regular basis, so it's probably only a matter of time before all of their players will have ogg support.
Here's the specs and pics (Score:2)
"Supports Windows 98/ME/2000/XP & Mac iHP-120, works under the biggest OS environments."
The UI looks clunky and I'd want a *NIX driver but it's good to see ogg/vorbis finally get into HW products.
Re:Here's the specs and pics (Score:2)
"The player appears as an external harddisk in Explorer on your PC. No installation is required."
This probably means that it uses the USB mass storage protocol, which the Linux kernel supports. Since other comments have implied that you play songs by just selecting the folder where you placed them, that would imply it should work just fine under Linux at least.
Solid State? (Score:2)
Re:Solid State? (Score:2)
iHP-100 is great (Score:2)
iRiver's Announcement on What Devices Support Ogg (Score:2, Interesting)
Neuros flameout (Score:3, Informative)
They plan to support ogg in NSM in "September" but there hasn't been a release yet and I doubt they will release in the next 15 hours. Support's coming, I'm sure, but so is Christmas and if iRiver delivers, Santa will deliver a lot of their players to my friends this holiday.
Neuros (Score:2)
Neuros has posted a social contract [neurosaudio.com] that decries DRM and supports Free Software via the BSD license.
Yeah, it has some drawbacks - the big one being that it's still a USB 1.1 device. Also, you can't get one outside of North America because it seems th
How are they doing this with software? (Score:2)
--D
hi-res photo of iRiver iHP 120 (Score:2)
Re:Ogg? (Score:5, Informative)
From their site [vorbis.com]: "Ogg Vorbis is a completely open, patent-free, professional audio encoding and streaming technology with all the benefits of Open Source." In other words, it has better compression than mp3, and since it's open source, you don't have to pay licensing fees on players that decode Ogg like you would with mp3.
Re:Ogg? (Score:2)
Remember, mp3 had a huge lead and dominates the market. A move away from that is sure to be slow, but if no alternative exists, then the holders of the mp3 patents can ex
Re:Ogg? (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... this design looks familiar.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple didn't create everything for god's sake, there were hard-drive based MP3 players around before the iPod...
let me refresh your memory [creative.com]
Re:hmmm... this design looks familiar.... (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... this design looks familiar.... (Score:2)
Re:Updating older players? (Score:3, Informative)
However, due to its limited (8mb) flash rom you'll have to select between MP3 and Ogg support.
Re:An ipod killer... not! (Score:3, Interesting)
Someone has to say this out loud: nobody * gives a rats behind about Ogg Vorbis.
* By "nobody" I actualy mean that only a very tiny minority of people who listen to music will a) know what it is and b) care enough about it for it to influence his/her purchase decision.
Listening to slashdot folks go on and on in discussion after discussion about it gets a little silly. It's almost as if readers here believe that the iPod would sell 10% more units if only it su
Re:An ipod killer... not! (Score:2, Insightful)
Every freaking time an Ogg Vorbis story gets posted on Slashdot, we get at least one comment like this one. The point, apparently, is that Vorbis is a waste of time, virtually nobody cares about it, it has no market share, so whoop-de-doo. Well, based on that kind of thinking we could have drawn the same conclusions about Linus Torvold's efforts many years ago when he first posted his new kernel.
I'll never understand the l
Re:An ipod killer... not! (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you tried the alternatives ? (Score:3, Interesting)
I haven't tried an iPod so in balance to your points here's what I like about iRiver ( I have one with memory rather than a hardrive btw )
1) Device is very solidly built, small and light. It's "tolbleronesque" shape is very nice also. Also the headphones supplied are nice and the sound quality is superb.
2) It's a USB Mass Storage device which means I can copy across music from Linux, Windows or Macs
3) It'
Re:Have you tried the alternatives ? (Score:2)
So in other words: You haven't tried any of the iPod-competitors, yet yo claim that they are no match to the iPod. How can you make that claim since you haven't tried them? Or are you just talking out of you ass?
Scratches (Score:2)
iPod Analysis (Score:2)
Re:An ipod killer... not! (Score:2)
Only thing better would be an ethernet port somewhere on the device or the dock, but even as is, the iHP-120 is still better than an iPod, at least for my needs.
Re:um.. (Score:2)
Re:Analog inputs? (Score:2)
Archos Recorder 20 (Score:2)