Rio Reveals iPod Mini Slayer 527
Remik writes "Rio has released a limited edition of its new hard drive based player called Carbon. Coming in lighter and denser (3.2oz with 5 GB of storage) than the Ipod Mini with the same price tag $249, twice the battery life, and nearly the same dimensions. Rio has only made 500 players available in the initial offering, so get one while they last. There's more info at cNet, Pocket Lint and Gizmodo. Highlights: Drag and drop file transfer, charging over USB and Janus compliance."
The real important question (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The real important question (Score:3, Funny)
The One Missing Feature (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:5, Informative)
No, no, no, no, no! Maybe if you're deaf, stick with the crappy stock headphones and encode at 64Kbit/sec. but otherwise, you will definitely notice. Buy yourself some Shure E3C's/Ultimate Ears/Etymolics, or, if you don't want to spend that much, spend $40USD on a pair of Sony NUDE MDR-EX71SL Fontopia's, then encode your music at at least 196Kbit/sec. You'll be amazed how much better your music sounds than with, say, the rubbish Apple white earbuds. Now transcode them from AAC to MP3 and listen to how crap they sound. But anyway, back to transcoding:
Lossy encoding works by stripping out the sounds that the encoder thinks your ears won't hear, using fancy psychoacoustic techniques and other assorted magic mojo. You get 10:1 (or better) compression, and it'll sound pretty good because most of the 4th gen. encoders (Apple AAC, Nero AAC, Vorbis, WMA9, etc.) do a good job of guessing what you won't miss. HOWEVER, when you then transcode this to another lossy format the new codec'll try to do this *all over again*, except it won't have much source material to work with this time (well, 1/10th of what it had before) and as a result will mash the sound terribly.
To use a variation on the good old "baking a cake" analogy:You start with your "source", which is a fully baked crusty cake (your 44KHz 16bit CD).
You want to make it "lighter" but appear visually the same, so, to do it in a vaguely similar way to what an encoder would do: you pull the cake into many pieces or so, then hollow out the middle bits and stick the outer crust pieces back together with some similar coloured icing. Flip it back over and, to most everyone, it still looks fairly like a normal cake (this is your encoding to AAC or whatever).
Now you want to "transcode" it. This would now be the equivalent of smashing this hollow cake up again, trying to take away another 10th of it, then trying to reconstruct the original "shell". Good luck, but it's going to look (sound) rubbish
(Yes, that analogy is pretty crap, but hey!)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Funny)
So what? It works with Kazaa and iMesh.
LK
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, if you wanted to make money, you wouldn't be in music, you'd get an degree in Law or something and work for the recording industry. That's where the big bucks are, forget this whole music thing.
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Funny)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome [wikipedia.org]
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:3, Insightful)
You haven't said much except the fact that the multi-gold/platinum-grammy-award-winner artists you work with don't feel like they're getting screwed.
Well duh.
And who said anything abou
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:5, Insightful)
But it has that other magical iPod mini feature.
scarcity
I'm only partly joking. The scarcity helps keep the hype up longer, and I'm sure has helped make the iPod mini -wanted- all the more by many - creating fanatically loyal users, kinda. Works for gmail too.
You're kidding, right? (Score:4, Insightful)
First off the user interface on Rios products, when combined with the software they employ, is easily as solid as Apple's line-up (more so IMHO in regards to the Karma, but that's just MHO). Regardless, your statement has ZERO merit since you provide no evidence WHY the Apple interface is superior.
That aside, the Carbon blows the iPod mini out of the water. First off the drive it uses is from Seagate and is 1gb larger. If I had to pick two companies I trust in HD tech it would be Seagate and WD, and while Toshiba is also pretty solid HDs aren't their main business.
Next we'll move onto another huge aspect of these players, battery life. The Carbon is cited, and this is a CONSERVATIVE estimate by Rio, at 20 hours. 20 hours! I mean that's TWO days of full use assuming you aren't using it constantly. The iPod mini TOPS OUT (and this is Apple's website here) at 8 hours. I mean is there even a comparison?
In terms of physical appearance I would vote without blinking for the Carbon. Maybe other people like their technology devices to be Muave or Coral Pink or something and look like a lighter, but I generally like sleek looking futuristic products with a bit of an edge. I think the Carbon looks pretty sharp in all ways, though I'd rather have blue in place of red for the keypad coloring. However, cosmetics are entirely personal, so this is kind of off topic.
What else is worth mentioning... WMA support which is, regardless of what Apple maniacs might say, much more useful than proprietary AAC support (face it, the world will use WMA DRM whether you like it or not). I don't purchase music online (so I have no use for WMA support), but its good for some folks.
Voice recorder... mini doesn't have it, Carbon does. Again I don't use it, but its a feature.
Basically the feature set of Rio's products is already LIGHT YEARS ahead of Apple, and it only seems to be growing. To bash the Carbon because it doesn't use a click wheel you like (and I hate) seems ridiculous to me. And the funny thing is that while I have a Karma I would NEVER buy a Carbon OR an iPod mini... I think a 4-5gb player at the price of a 20gb player is for morons.
In short, judge the devices on their merits and try to be at least moderately open-minded here.
-rt
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
You don't have to be very open minded to realize they're only going to sell 500 of these things.
Oh sure, maybe they'll sell more of them LIGHT YEARS in the future when the component costs come down into the range that will make the device profitable, but let's face it... They are only making 500 of these things right now for a reason. Apple updates the iPod every 6 months or so. Do you really think this thing
Re:The One Missing Feature (Score:4, Funny)
You can't? Wow, finally something physical I'm good at!
Re:Are you retarded? (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to be that millions of people "beyond apple fan-boys" already have, considering the ipod is by far the most popular portable mp3 player in the world. This is despite the fact that there are alternatives with more capacity and battery life than ipods. The interface is the distinguishing feature.
Would you buy a car that you had to steer with two buttons rather than a wheel? If not, why not?
Re:Are you retarded? (Score:5, Insightful)
The UI is fine, but the learning curve on my Nomad is only marginally longer than that of the iPod and I personally prefer the placement of the controls on the sides.
If ANY of the other already existing MP3 players had received the kind of marketing push the iPod got, they could have easily become the "gold standard." Instead, the other companies, either because of a lack of funding or an in-house decision to marginalize their own products as being niche, didn't take the risk.
Re:Are you retarded? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is fallacious reasoning. Would you buy a keyboard that had a wheel instead of buttons? You are drawing an analogy to a completely unrelated situation.
I agree with the other respondent - the differentiating factor is above all else marketing, something that Apple is very good at. It does have a cool design, but so do Rio products and a number of others that are around the place.
Re:Are you retarded? (Score:3, Insightful)
If it's not the interface that has served the iPod so well (over 3Million sales so far) then what do you suppose it is?
To generalise, it must also be "apple fan boys" (some 10Million at that) that use Mac OS X, and not people who have
Re:Are you retarded? (Score:5, Insightful)
The Rio Carbon "iPod Mini Slayer" has been available in black [popularmechanics.com] for over a year now; it was actually released months before the iPod mini albiet at 1.5GB.
It was one of the first "mini" players to offer everything the iPod offered and more ... in a small thin case to boot. With no iPod Mini in sight the player actually had no competition. So why didn't it sell?
Marketing. The early adopters had already bought their players so the only market left was the masses. The masses are easily influenced by style. Stylish ads, stylish interface, stylish software, stylish player.
Reviews of the black Rio Nitrus were luke-warm [ign.com] at best. Most people agreed that the player itself was stylish, but the interface was clunky, the software was garbage, and there were no stylish ads to say otherwise.
Lets face it, every player plays MP3 ... The masses don't really care whether or not the player has OGG support or lossless audio support. So when all things are equal the style factor kicks in.
This new Rio Carbon [digitalnetworksna.com] is a true testament to the success of Apples approach to marketing style. They have duplicated it right down to the box [digitalnetworksna.com].
Unfortunately by doing so there is really no good reason for the masses to jump onboard. When mom or dad is buying an MP3 player for Christmas and they have to choose between the $249 5GB Rio Carbon or the $249 4GB iPod Mini which box do you think they will reach for?
Just one thing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just one thing (Score:5, Funny)
Finally, an MP3 player that appeals to the baker demographic of audiophiles.
Re:Just one thing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just one thing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just one thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but you're the minority (Score:4, Insightful)
Good for you. However, most people decide based upon more subjective criteria.
The Carbon will not kill the iPod mini - it's too ugly and the specs of iPod mini clears the "good enough" criterion without problem. I also understand that it doesn't have the sexy clickwheel thingy.
Gadgets for Joe Average is about an experience in addition to techincal specs. The Carbon doesn't seem to have what it takes.
they forgot the second part of the name... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:they forgot the second part of the name... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:they forgot the second part of the name... (Score:5, Insightful)
A fool in your eyes perhaps, but what apple realise is that a fool's money is as good as anyone else's.
Drag and drop (Score:5, Funny)
Let's just hope it's scratch resistant and shock proof!
wow (Score:3, Interesting)
Cost Prohibitive (Score:2, Insightful)
If it's because of the MicroDrive being used in players like the iPod mini, why not start selling iPod full size players in 5GB amounts? It would really be nice to see these "iPod killers"
Re:Cost Prohibitive (Score:5, Insightful)
Because it's aimed at a different market! The mini is aimed at people who are considering a solid-state player: ie size is even more important to them than masses of storage space. It's also aimed at the more style conscious rather than us geeks: hence the multitude of colours for the mini and the choice of any colour as long as it's white for the ipod.
Re:Cost Prohibitive (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, just because solid state players are expensive per megabyte doesn't mean
Re:Cost Prohibitive (Score:5, Insightful)
Because people are still waiting weeks for the honor of paying $250 for a mini. If the demand is there, why on earth would Apple choose to lower the price?
-Ted
It's the hard drives! (Score:3, Informative)
All the components are (essentially) the same, except the hard drive. The hard drive for the iPod is a 1.8" part, and the mini uses an even smaller 'microdrive' that is the same form as a compactflash card, IIRC.
The 4GB microdrive costs about as much as the 15GB minidrive, hence the cost parity.
Rarely does speed/size equate exactly with price, there's a bottom-limit and a steep upward-curve as you move from low-cost to high-end electronics.
Re:It's the hard drives! (Score:3, Informative)
Hmm. (Score:5, Insightful)
Once again, the competition needs to realize Apple's success is not due to its technical dominance but rather its popular dominance. The iPod (mini) is a part of mainstream pop culture. This new device does not look to replace the mini anytime soon.
Re:Hmm. (Score:5, Insightful)
Once again, the competition needs to realize Apple's success is not due to its technical dominance but rather its popular dominance. The iPod (mini) is a part of mainstream pop culture. This new device does not look to replace the mini anytime soon.
Exactly what I was going to say. The iPod is now a status symbol. There may be more functional MP3 players (iRiver...debatable) and cheaper MP3 players, but the masses don't want the better player, they want the iPod. Besides, no one has really gotten user friendlyness down except Apple (the click wheel is perfect and the UI is amazing...my dad could figure it out after about 10 seconds and I once got a call from him asking how to open Word..).
Unf.
Re:Hmm. (Score:2, Insightful)
apple can't just sit on it's ass while others make progress, well, it can but then it'll be fscked again and looking for the next ipod.
and masses don't know what's better(mac reality distortien field affected don't count as masses either).
Re:Hmm. (Score:5, Insightful)
There's also the fact that the iPod's status as a "status symbol" grants it essentially the same feature that Windows has: there's tons of support for it. In much the same way that there are tons of applications and games for Windows and a small percentage of them have a Linux port, there are tons of third party companies that make accessories for the iPod, and a small percentage of them make a matching accessory for another MP3 player. It's gotten to the point where there are entire aisles in some retail stores that are devoted solely to the iPod. Cases, battery packs, car adapters, FM transmitters, portable speakers, headphones... all designed either to interface with the iPod or, in the case where the part fits any MP3 player (headphones), match the iPod's color scheme.
Not the whole story (Score:5, Insightful)
The iPod is beautiful and it has a killer interface. Anyone can use it, and it is very intuitive. Each iteration seems to get incrementally more user-friendly and marginally better-looking, too.
This monstrosity that is a so-called "iPod-slayer" looks hideously cumbersome to use.
brand value ! (Score:4, Interesting)
Chicks love apple
Re:brand value ! (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to
Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone else notice the glaring typo's in the system requirements (MAC and spave)? Seems a little rushed to me.
Re:Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:2)
Yeah, dammit! iTunes is one of the greatest advantages with the iPod. It's just so...nice!
Re:Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:3, Informative)
Perhaps you failed to grasp that the Rio Carbon has a scroll wheel.
Re:Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:3, Interesting)
I should have mentioned of course that I was indicating both the physical interface and the software interface. Both are exceptionally lacking.
Re:Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:5, Interesting)
Is that worth losing a GB and some battery life? I don't know... for me it is, but perhaps not for some. My point is just that the devil is in the details. This is the one thing Apple does really get. Just because they both have some type of "wheel" does not mean they are equivalent.
Cheers.
Scroll wheel superiority (Score:3, Interesting)
So the wheel is superior, but do you notice the difference in daily use? I don't on my Creative Zen NX 30Gb, which has better battery life and cost $150 less than the 30Gb iPod when I bought it.
Re:Surely not an iPod Mini slayer (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't understand the rationale behind this argument. From a functional point of view I can't see why it's any easier to move a lever up or down to scroll through a list than it is to spin a wheel. In fact, I find with web pages that are particularly long (e.g.
Yes, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
...does it support Ogg Vorbis?
Oh and don't mod me flamebait, I'm serious! Because the Rio Karma [digitalnetworksna.com] DOES support Ogg.
Interface? (Score:4, Interesting)
IMNSHO, one of the things, if not the main thing that makes the iPods and iPod Minis great is the interface.
However, I see no hints in the pictures as to what the interface is like except for the thumb-wheel on the top right. The Pocket Lint article mentions that the interface is the same as the Rio Karma, which I have never used. Can anyone enlighten us as to how the interface compares with the iPods's?
Re:Interface? (Score:4, Informative)
Actually that's a good thing because one of the problems of the Karma was that when it fell on said wheel it would tend to break because a 20GB player still weighs a lot (relative to a solid state/mini-hd player)
If you read some reviews or try a rio for yourself you'll notice that they've got an interface that's just as easy to navigate as the iPod interface, often there's more than one way to do something right
500 Players? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:500 Players? (Score:4, Funny)
Janus? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Janus? (Score:5, Informative)
interpreting janus as a symbol of duplicitly is a more modern cast of the roman god.
Re:Janus? (Score:2)
The modern connotation of "two-faced" didn't appear until much, much later (middle ages, I believe).
Nope (Score:3, Informative)
I smell a plant. (Score:4, Insightful)
Astroturf?
Perfect addition to the market (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact that Rio made it with better specs than iPod mini will likely help it with consumers who want the most bang for the buck. This is probably a good strategy if you're going after the late comers to the market (after the early adopter's demand has been met). Howeve
Re:Perfect addition to the market (Score:2)
Re:Perfect addition to the market (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Perfect addition to the market (Score:3, Informative)
Additionally, iPod mini supplies were limited due
MP3 and WMA only? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think I'll stick with my iriver, thanks.
And a 90-day warranty... (Score:5, Informative)
I had 3 Karmas die on me: the first after a month (under warranty; the power button stopped working). Then the replacement died after 2 weeks because an exposed wheel got knocked out of place while it was in my bag. It took over a month to get the third one back from RMA, and that one just died from hard drive failure, out of warranty. Overall, Rio had my karma in RMA longer than I had a working unit.
I've got most of my music as
Re:And a 90-day warranty... (Score:4, Interesting)
That makes two of us. My first one lasted for about six-ish months before kicking the bucket - died the oh-so-common "stuck hard drive" [riovolution.com] problem, where customer service tells you to smack the unit to get it to work again. Ummm, no. Returned to the retailer under the service plan for a new one. Had the new one about two months before the same thing happened. RMA'ed it back to Digital Networks, got a refurb. Had the refurb less than five days before the exact same problem reared its head. That's Karma #3, and it went back to Digital Networks last week while I await a fourth unit.
I've got most of my music as
Same here. Partly geek-factor, partly because I wanted true stereo and better compression at higher bitrates, yadda yadda yadda. Regardless, I have pretty limited options for a small-form-factor, high-capacity player that suits my needs, so for the time being I'm stuck waiting for another refurb unit. Eventually, I may just re-rip my entire collection and start over with a different codec.
Re:And a 90-day warranty... (Score:4, Interesting)
That's exactly what I did. I had started to encode my CD collection to vorbis, but gave it up after I realized hardware support was going to suck. I ended up encoding the collection in FLAC, then batch encoded all the FLAC files to LAME APS. This gives me the flexibility to use any portable player, in my case it ended up being iPod and iTunes.
Re:And a 90-day warranty... (Score:4, Funny)
Thank you! Thank you. I'm hear all weekend. Try the veal.
What music formats do it support? (Score:2)
People... about that 500... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.digitalnetworksna.com/email/
Re:People... about that 500... (Score:3, Informative)
"It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees!" Catch-22"
This quote is usually attributed to Emiliano Zapata, leader of the 1910 Mexican revolution; in Catch-22, it's only there to serve as an excuse for the boring retort: "It is better to live on your feet than to die on your knees" ...
Mac support? (Score:5, Informative)
Again: no radio :( (Score:5, Interesting)
It is strange since all MP3 players from taiwan/japan and european manufacturers have radios (often even the capability to record radio directly). Just Apple and RIO don't. Is it an american peculiarity, is radio so impopular in the US?
Re:Again: no radio :( (Score:2, Funny)
Radio replacement (Score:3, Funny)
If I want a "morning drive" program I just swear randomly into a microphone for a few minutes and add that to the playlist I have on random.
yet another "ipod killer" (Score:2)
Poor hardware (Score:5, Informative)
I don't care what they make, I won't be buying rio ever again. Obviously this is just an observation of my experiences and other third party heresay. However that's a total of a good 10 people. Enough to tell me that it's not just me. Most of them got ipods already and my brother just got one as well.
So i'm gonna just get myself an ipod and see how it fairs. I'd do the whole christmas buy an ipod thing but this time around i'll just think of something else.
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery (Score:3, Interesting)
copying, duplication, reproduction, xerox, facsimile, simulation, impersonation, personation, semblance, parody, take-off, lampoon, caricature, plagiarism, forgery, counterfeit, imitator, echo, parrot, mime, imitate, copy, mirror, reflect, reproduce, repeat, do like, match, mimic, simulate, impersonate, follow suit, follow the example of, walk in the shoes of, take a leaf out of another's book, strike in with, follow suit, take after, model after, emulate, mimic.
Finally, in the words of Wordsworth, "like - but oh! how different! "
Thanks to the Project Gutenberg thesaurus
RE: Rio beating anything (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Rio beating anything (Score:3, Funny)
Re: Rio beating anything (Score:5, Interesting)
I bought an original Apple iPod back when they first were introduced. A couple of months ago the hard drive in it died, and rather than pay the $270 Apple wanted to fix it, I decided to spend about another $100 and get a new model. Upgrade and all that.
Well, wouldn't you know it, I got a bad one. It worked fine out of the box for a couple of days, but then it froze up and couldn't be reset.
I called Apple (I ordered my iPod online) and the guy checked my ZIP code and told me to take it to the Apple store at such-n-such address. I did, waited in line for about 20 minutes (during which I surfed the Net on the G5 at the store). I showed the guy behind the counter my iPod, and he said, "Wait just a minute, please." And he disappeared in the back with my iPod.
About a minute later, seriously in almost no time at all, he emerged and said, "Here you go." And he handed me a brand-new, still-in-the-shrinkwrap iPod box.
Me: "Huh?"
The Guy: "Here's your new iPod. Sorry for the inconvenience."
Me: "What's the catch?"
There was no catch. If your iPod breaks and it's under warranty, take it to an Apple store. They will hand you a new one and send you home. No Bangalore call center, no RMA, no waiting 2-3 weeks, none of that. Just "Here's your new iPod. Sorry for the inconvenience."
That was just cool.
_another_ 'ipod slayer' (Score:5, Insightful)
What the slashdot crowd seems to fail to realise is that releasing a device with a bigger hard drive or longer battery life or some other fancy technical specification doesn't make it an 'ipod killer'. The ipod excels in many other areas - design, ease-of-use, reputation etc.
Making it worse, these 'ipod killers' are often a joke. They'll have say one technical aspect thats better than the ipod, but on pretty much everything else will fail (i.e. a bigger hard drive but crappy user interface and too big and ugly design etc). Sony's 'ipod killer' is the worst example - release a device crippled with DRM and requiring transcoding to Sony's dead ATRAC format with the resulting awful sound quality and post on slashdot about it killing the ipod. Which is of course a pity because Sony's engineers - if they weren't handcuffed by their music division - could very likely produce a superior product.
The ipod will of course not remain dominant forever, but it'll take more than a device with just a big hard drive or battery - and with only 500 available - to remove it from the throne.
To be taken with a healthy pinch of salt. (Score:3, Insightful)
Rio has a habit of producing mp3 devices that are dependent on propriatary windows software.
I was considering the rio-nitrus for a while untill I found out that it used an encrypted hard drive, and was in NO WAY compatible with Linux.
And it also remains to be seen how much it will cost to replace this battery in 1yrs time when they start wearing out.
Seriously, can anyone give me a GOOD reason why a company, like Rio, would not want other people to write extensions to thier devices?
Recurrent Hyperbole (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, every single portable media player is touted as an iPod killer. Can't something be a competitor, or alternative, or just hanging out having a smoke?
Not that I really care, I don't own an iPod, but these "killer" headlines are starting to sound like the "BSD is dead" troll.
The Digital Music Player We Really Need (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd like to see THIS digital music player:
Inexpensive and reliable 60+ GB notebook hard drive.
More battery capacity, in an inexpensive, standard, replaceable battery format.
Larger display, for my 40 something eyes.
Standard hard drive file storage, so I can mount it and drag & drop files. Works with any OS, no special music download software needed, can serve as a portable data backup or transfer device.
Support for all popular audio codecs, including MP3, Ogg, etc.
No digital rights management crap. I rip my CDs and copy them to the player. Period. I don't need the RIAA in my business every time I want to copy my CD to my portable player.
Hotswap cradle to charge the player, copy tunes and connect to external powered speakers, just like my my Karma 20.
A good built in FM transmitter so an FM car radio can be used.
Admittedly, most people want a "smaller is better" MP3 player, not the less expensive 2X sized device I'd like to have, but I think there's a market for it. I have no use for a 5 GB player that stores 1/3 of my CD collection. I can see a use for tiny 256 MB players for people who want a couple of albums while they run, bike, commute, etc. But I'm spoiled by carrying my entire music collection. I frequently have a chance meeting with someone and play an obscure song for them, and the odds it'd be in a 256 MB device are slim. Besides, I never know what I want to hear ahead of time.
Bonus! Here's a free music download link from Tempus that I saw on /. Good stuff, reminiscent of Dave Mathews:
http://www.tempusband.com/mp3.html [tempusband.com]
Re:The Digital Music Player We Really Need (Score:3, Informative)
I totally agree, by the way, about carrying my whole collection with me. Right now my laptop is my primary music player, and with a 40 gig drive, it happily holds everything I could want to audition for so
iPod mini clone down to the initial production run (Score:3, Interesting)
Unlike the iPod mini, which was so successful it blew away Apple's ability to manufacture to meet demand (hence the production run joke), Rio is taking a wait and see approach by only investing in the production of 500 of these units.
My wild-ass-guess is that they want to project market demand with the first run and if numbers come out the way they want, they will build more. If not, then on to the next iPod mini Burninator [homestarrunner.com].
This may be a good for Rio but bad for the early addopters of the pilot devices who get left with an uncommon Rio unit that may well be unsupported soon.
The iPod mini is a sure thing at the same $249 price point and, oh yeah, it plays Fairplay tracks so you don't have to support the evil that is WMA.
Why, God? WHY? (Score:3, Insightful)
It comes in a stylish cardboard cube.
It holds music on a tiny hard drive.
It costs $250.
It's small.
It uses a D-Pad almost exactly like my Treo 600.
I'm sorry, but the Treo *sucks* as a media player, and that D-Pad is the main reason *why* it sucks.
It sounds good enough, pTunes handles all the right formats... But it's a bear to control. It's like driving an ice cream truck by gesturing emphatically.
This could be an iPod Mini killer, but it needs a better UI.
How can it be a killer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:mini slayer? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:mini slayer? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:mini slayer? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:the apple argument (Score:2)
I bought the Mini iPod... (Score:3, Informative)