Neuros Audio Releases Its Hardware Schematics 286
iswm writes "Neuros Audio has released the schematics to their Neuros Digital Audio Computer. Now with open source firmware, hardware schematics, ogg support, tons of other cool features, and an amazing price tag, The Neuros is looking like an awesome competitor in the audio player market."
Official Product of the Slashdot Network (Score:4, Funny)
Ogg Support (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ogg Support (Score:5, Informative)
People are also working on other alternative codecs, including FLAC, musepac and a few others I've heard talk about in IRC.
Why not FLAC support??? (Score:3, Interesting)
(What would be doubly-nice is if it supported real-time recording to FLAC from a line level input, but I'll bitch and whine about the absence of that feature when they get around to having it at least *play* FLAC...)
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:3, Informative)
Also, I don't know what FLAC would do to the battery life. Since the data rate is so high (compared to a lossy format) you'll be running the disk A LOT more.
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:2)
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:3, Informative)
portable DAT recorder works perfectly, and with the right computer DAT drive you can quickly extract the audio files off the tape and into uncompressed 44.1 or 48KHZ wav files.
I do this all the time, the deck cost me less than $450.00 new and with the Sure pocket field mixer and a pair of high end electret microphones hidden on my lapels I can get extremely good live concert recordings without anyone knowing.
it records better than any
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:2)
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:2)
portable DAT recorder works perfectly,
I've got an iRiver [iriver.com] h120 with giant squid audio [giant-squi...io-lab.com] mics recording to 44.1 wav (or straight to mp3, if it doesn't matter) which I can drag and drop straight off to my linux box. I can record for 10 hours on the internal battery (though due to the disk being FAT, it'll only do about 2 hours max in one file!).
Re:Why not FLAC support??? (Score:2)
Why bother? I can pretty much guarantee that the onboard ADC will be cheap and nasty. What's the point in making a lossless recording passed through headphone quality interconnects and audio-stages? Ever tried recoding line-level in your average soundca
iRiver does what you describe (Score:3, Informative)
The only problem is that they're buggy. Some people have reported recording glitches when the player goes to store the captured data to disk, i.e. periodic hiccups in the recording. I haven't really noticed it myself, but I normally record voice. A friend has recorded live music wi
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Clicky clicky...! (Score:2)
Re:Ogg Support (Score:3)
So I bought an iPod
Re:Ogg Support (Score:2)
I haven't tried it with ogg (because I don't have any ogg music), but at least, in a sense, it is multi-format.
-9mm-
Re:Ogg Support (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MP3 Support? No thanks. (Score:2)
I'm a _huge_ fan and supporter of ogg, and you're really not helping any, please stop now.
neuros audio (Score:3, Interesting)
I have one of these ( practically smuggled from US), and it is impressive what they did. It works perfect, it's open, it works with Linux, you can hack it, you can broadcast radio, etc, etc.
Kudos to the Neuros Audio! Keep it open!
Re:neuros audio (Score:2)
LAME encoded mp3's are great. And until you can carry around your whole CD collection in lossless format in your pocket (portable device) then MP3 is here to stay.
Anyway, after reading the article and what you can do with it, I take it all back. It's awesome.
Re:neuros audio (Score:2)
Re:neuros audio (Score:2)
S
Re:neuros audio (Score:2)
Re:neuros audio (Score:2)
My main question, which you seem to have answered, is how open is the platform. Since they published the schematics (did they pub gerbers?) I wonder if someone (say me) could start building the boards and shipping out just the PCBs for "roll your own" players?
-nB
Re:neuros audio (Score:3, Insightful)
If you're thinking of "rolling your own", forget it. It doesn't make economic sense. Even if you did have the gerbers, making the boards would probably cost a minimum of $100. Then you'd have to buy all the components and solder them on. I don't know what the component cost is, but after looking at the schematics, I noticed that they use several highly specialized chips. You probably would not be able to purchase these chips yourself in singular
Open firmware over open hardware.... (Score:4, Interesting)
So far all the hardware players had that "Ipod Killer" tag, which isn't the TFA :).
Open firmware is cool - but hardware schematics are more iffy. All in all, I'd put open firmware over hardware schemas any day :)
Have you seen Simputer General Public License [simputer.org] which Simputer uses for their hardware ?. I suppose Neuros has some kind of licensing model at least for defining copyright and that kind of stuff. This is kinda blind faith to re-use or work on.Schematics for developers (Score:3, Insightful)
Tellyawhat: any other established company that wanted schematics could pay a single engineer a month's contract and would get the compete schematic. It's less likely this would be so easily obtainable in the oss crowd, since that would depend on someone with the skills and equipment needed to perform the operation volunteering their time.
You think you could just take those schematics and go into competition with them? Or better still j
Cool idea. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cool idea. (Score:2)
if you only have to get the ipod near the computer to sync and upload that would rule.
a friend of mine had a HD mp3 player from germany that had no connections other than a power plug for charging, it had 802.11g in it and as long as you were in the house it would wake up, allow you to send or retrieve files from it and then go back to sleep.
it was great, he had some rare TMBG tracks on it, and offered to let me upload them, I mentioned, "go get your player
Re:Cool idea. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cool idea. (Score:2)
Functionality isn't really why the iPod is so popular. I've used it and it isn't any more functional (less so IMO) than some other players. The iSheep like it because they are convinced by a well organized and orchestrated marketing blitz that it is best and that they will be "with it" if they are seen wear
Obviously I'm missing something... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why exactly ?
Re:Obviously I'm missing something... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Obviously I'm missing something... (Score:2)
Mod parent down (Score:2)
Or do we really want
Re:Mod parent down (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Obviously You Need to RTFA (Score:2)
You can also get a 256MB embedded flash version for $140.
Re:Obviously You Need to RTFA (Score:2)
Click on the little shopping cart beside the product on the product page [neurosaudio.com].
With the size of the storage... (Score:2, Interesting)
Does anybody know if such a project is being undertaken for the Neuros? I might even pick one up and hack on it myself for my own edification.
Re:With the size of the storage... (Score:2)
Somebody is working on FLAC, too, I think. Not sure who, at the moment, though.
Re:With the size of the storage... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:With the size of the storage... (Score:2)
Re:With the size of the storage... (Score:2)
Re:With the size of the storage... (Score:2)
I can hear the difference between lame and lossless on several Boston tracks up to between 224 and 256 kbit/s on $90 Sony MDR-V6 headphones. Beyond that I haven't been able to find a source I listen to that makes a difference. That said, I encoded all my CDs to FLAC, and keep a transcoded version at 192 ABR simultaneously. FLAC for the heavy duty listening or future recoding to the "latest greatest", and MP3 for my portable, which usually gets modulated to the
I have one. (Score:5, Interesting)
However, it is perfect for carrying in a backpack. The built in mic is sensitive enough for recording interviews, and the harddrive can hold alot more than other portable recorders you can buy.
FM transmitting- I love it, but it's not really powerful enough here in the Washington, DC area with all the background noise to be picked up more than 3 or so feet away.
The sound quality is decent, but the included headphones broke within two months. I did go jogging with them, so that might be the reason.
Re:I have one. (Score:2)
Re:I have one. (Score:2)
How was your experience jogging with the HD? In my experience HD based players tend to skip when I run, due to the jolt when my feet hit the ground.
That's what the Neuros flash backpack [neurosaudio.com] is used for. The design totally rocks, you have a single player that can have a hard drive backpack for normal use, then switch to the flash backpack for doing high impact activities.
Re:I have one. (Score:2)
The key to making the FM transmitter work in DC/Baltimore is to make sure the Neuros is plugged into your ciggarrette light adaptor. Or just take off your external attenna.
I took off my attenna because I was tired of people changing the radio station on me (I listen to European metal for the most part and the radio sucks) and my Camaro looks better without an attenna :)
You could also resolder the RF port to the internal attenna and try that.
Getting a Neuros II would fix it automatically because those
Re:I have one. (Score:2)
The size doesn't bother me because it works so well for what I need it for. If fits in my vest pocket without a problem. Another feature that makes it better IMO than an iPod is the 5 programmable buttons. They makes finding favorite lists or picking up where I left
Re:I have one. (Score:2)
It does have mic in.
Unfortunately... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:2)
It's also sold in plenty of other places that will sell outside the US.
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:2)
Yeah . . . (Score:2)
No, but... (Score:2)
http://neuros-firmware.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/
Re:No, but... (Score:2)
Re: Cameras in phones are stupid extras (Score:2)
Yes, cameras in phones are usually not even reasonable quality.
No, not all uses of cameras require great quality.
Your "stupid extra" can easily be someone else's "I can't read or remember phone numbers, but I can recognize a picture of [Mommy/Daddy]!"
Re: Cameras in phones are stupid extras (Score:2)
B) I never said a thing about the quality of these cameras.
C) Why are you calling your toddler on a cell phone (as implied by your "[Mommy/Daddy]")?
Fun hack (Score:3, Interesting)
On the I don't think it stands a chance at doing well in the marketplace though until it cuts it's size down some. The seperate player and hardrive backpack is fine (and infact prefered) for a car based system, but way to clunky for a handheld.
Lastly, speaking of OGG has anyone had any real-life experiance with the MPIO HD-300? I saw it in Best Buy, and it looked like a really nice system - 20 GB, about the same size as the iPod, felt solid, played OGG MP3 and WMA, was 20 bucks less than the iPod, and supposedly has significantly better battery life. This claim is backed up by the fact that in the past thier flash models have had the best battery life in the industry. On the other hand thier website has horrible english, so I would expect support to be lacking, and I can't find any sites that have actually reviewed the device (just regurgitated the press release, let users post uninformed opinions, and then called it a review). Anyone have some real info to add to this? Especially about its reliability/quality and how well it works with Linux?
Re:Fun hack (Score:2)
http://xenna.no-ip.com/auto/console.jpg [no-ip.com]
http://xenna.no-ip.com/auto/full.jpg [no-ip.com]
The remote control works pretty well on the dashboard although the display could be a bit bigger.
X.
It realy comes down to UI, though... (Score:4, Insightful)
-- I like the swappable backpack idea because it makes for cheaper upgrading and the ability for more than one person to use the same device with minimal difficulty.
-- I absolutely LOVE the integrated FM broadcast. This hit the market before everyone and their mother was making add-ons for this functionality, and it's still a really handy feature. It means that _I_ always get to hear my music in other people's cars, because no one else has this ability!
-- HiSi (the song-identifier) is a pretty nifty gimick, too, although of minimal use (more to the point is the built-in FM reciever...something that I think EVERY audio player should have -- it costs about 20 cents to include at this point, why not do it?!?!)
(disclaimer at this point -- mine IS the old version)
!!!HOWEVER!!!
The one failing of the Neuros is in its interface. Navigation is painfully slow. You cannot queue up songs while it's playing. Organizing songs into playlists inexplicably takes about 3 or 4 seconds once you've decided upon a song and selected "Add to my playlist". There is no way to play a series of albums, so you are stuck playing alphabetically by song title, by artist (and then within the artist by song title) or album-by-album. See previous statment about creating custom playlists. Oh yeah, and for some reason, it takes about 3 seconds to boot each time you start it. My PC starts faster!!
So, to put it lightly, the interface plain SUCKS! And ultimately, that's what matters. I love the tech aspect of this device. The open-standards are awesome (ogg support used to require a separate version of the firmware -- dunno if that's still true); there's a thriving developer's community which is fully supported by the company. Their customer service is phenominal (a broken mini-audio jack took 5 days to fix -- shipping time to Chicago included!). But the interface needs a lot of work.
And the interface of an audio player is the make-it or break-it point, IMHO. It's what you see every day. How quickly can you play your music? Good interfaces are invisible. You don't notice that they are there. You just notice that you can get the job done and do it quickly. I think this is more important in the portable-audio market than anywhere else. If I have to make the decision whether or not to turn on my device because there is a 10-second lead-in before music starts and a 5-second end sequence, then they've lost me...
I haven't had a chance to get my hands on a generation 2 device yet, so perhaps there has been a massive improvement. However, as of now, my next audio player purchase will be an iPod -- unless someone can point me to a better interface!
Re:It realy comes down to UI, though... (Score:3, Informative)
Garbage as immensely improved the UI, as has DI (the guys who make the Neuros).
The latest firmware has the 'Play Queue' - you can add songs to this on the fly, without interrupting playback. It is lost when you shut down the player, though.
And yes, this works on the Gen-1 devices (I have one, too)
eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
It is? With a market-share of less than 1.5% [itfacts.biz] can someone please tell me how on earth they can remotely be a "competitor"?
Hell, HP became number 2 overnight simply by playing nice with Apple. Which just goes to show the sad state of affairs with the quality of competition that Apple is up against.
Re:eh? (Score:2)
hee hee, you said "number 2".
ok, I need to do some work now...
Re:eh? (Score:2)
Gapless playback? (Score:2)
For all the Rio Karma bashing I've read on here, I see very little discussion of this (IMO) essential feature. The Karma's got it in spades. I playback albums that I ripped years ago before I even though about gapless playback and they play flawlessly. Try listening t
Just got my Neuros (Score:2)
Then I found this this [sourceforge.net]. I'm going to try it when I get home.
Windows-only?!? No Linux, BSD or OS X ?? (Score:2)
HUH?!?
Open source, open firmware, schematics... but Windows-only software support?
I'm just going to assume that's misleading/incorrect somehow, it probably works like any USB storage class device, but... how odd that they list only Windows OS support...
On 'iPod killers' (Score:3, Interesting)
1. proudly declare they don't use it (optionally including reasons that only make sense to them)
2. start an open source clone of it
3. and then evangelize it based on moral goodness
Regardless of the open source version's merit, you turn people off at step one. Now, I don't know what Apple has done to you, but a killer audio player is not formed out of spite for large corporations or the mainstream. It is made based on realizing where current players falter (battery life, size, UI) and improving on those. Nobody cares if the firmware is open source except the esoteric readers of Slash.
Seriously, how many projects do you start with the intent to 'kill' another product? And here is a player with Ogg support, now the hivemind complains that it doesn't support FLAC!
Re:Advertising ? (Score:3, Insightful)
It can be the best product ever, because it is geeky... I am not sure it will beat the iPod which has become a de facto standard.
Maybe it's just the iPod name that is becoming a standard with non-geeks. I expect lots of people think they have an 'iPod' made by Creative or Philips. The same way everyone now has these 'mp3 files' that are actually Windows media, AAC or Ogg.
There's stilly plenty of opportunity for iPod to lose its dominant position... especially since MS are in the market.
Re:Advertising ? (Score:2)
XBox - big ugly console
Windows smartphones - powerful but poor battery life
Windows media PC - Just a PC with a tweaked OS
Tablet PC - nice idea, too expensive
etc...
Owning a Neuros (Score:2)
Initially the UI was a little clunky, but with successive Firmware updates it has gotten much better.
The unit is bulkier compared to the iPod, but it plays almost any file format - MP3, WMA, OGG...
Tech support is also amazing. I had a problem with the unit not recharding properly. I sent it over to them and they fixed the unit and sent it back to me in about two weeks. Very prompt.
Re:Advertising ? (Score:2)
Best player for geeks maybe. Geeks are a minority I'm afraid. And not all geeks want something geeky either.
Re:Advertising ? (Score:2)
I would rather have something that is simple and sounds great, without the waft some "geeky" stuff have. I like my Muvo player, simple, and sweet.
Windows not required (Score:3, Informative)
I use a sync program called NDBM (neurosdbm.sourceforge.net). It's written in Java and runs perfectly on Linux.
There are other Sync managers, too, if you refuse to install Java. Sorune (http://www.sorune.tk/) is written in Perl-Tk.
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
These specific programs just make things more complicated than they have to be. They also tend to be quickly outdated and have support abandoned. So much easier just to treat it like any other external storage device - both for the learning curve and ease of use.
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
However, like many players, it has an internal database of songs that the firmware reads. You need a sync manager to create/update this database so teh Neuros knows what songs it has loaded.
Without a sync manager, it's a really expensive hard drive with a built-in FM radio.
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
Re:Windows not required (Score:2)
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Hell, just to use optical I had to modify some deep setting regarding which input is associated with which mode on the receiver (had to associate the coaxial input from CD player to DVD player). This can really mess things up and get confusing, since the labels on the back of the receiver always stay the same.
Re:Where's the FireWire? (Score:2)
Neuros USB is s-l-o-w (Score:2)
Every once in a while the HD goes into a skip-skip-skip-skip mode
Waiting for the 'end record' command to be accepted also takes a while
Re:The buzz word of 2004 is... (Score:4, Funny)
Three cheers for the phrase "awesome competitor" instead.
TW
Re:A lot of people (Score:2)
This must be the same reason the Chevy Cavaler sold so well.
In all seriousness, I think the popularity of iPod is a right time/right place type of issue. Archos was too early and everyone else going for the 20+ gig player market will be too late unless they can really really reduce the price of their player. People are willing to pay for convience and conformity. Windows machines sell so well because they know
Re:A lot of people (Score:2)
Nothing against aesthetics but utility is A-1 in my book. Aestetics is good but only if resources allow and it doesn't stand in the way of utility. It's kinda like video games, I'd rather play a smooth game on a good engine than play something with eye candy that makes it lag and jerk.
Re:Good for a Beta (Score:2)
Re:Great concept. Terrible player. (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I have to say, that DI has stepped up to the plate and made things right for everybody I've spoken with on the message boards and on IRC. Most of the problems are due to firmware bugs that were worked out (or, at least, worked around) - but DI has been good about fixing the hardware problems, too.
They have a very reasonable ba
Re:Great concept. Terrible player. (Score:2, Informative)
Thank goodness I ordered through their website and got the 30-day moneyback guarantee. I would absolutely recommend this to ANYone buying a Neuros. Getting it from a cheapy store
Re:Great concept. Terrible player. (Score:3, Informative)
One of these does have a problem...apparently with the flash memory. I've updated firmwares in the rest of them and they work well. I am quite fond of my Neuros units.
It may be you got a bad unit. It does happen.
On another note, I just realized that since I have multiple of them, I really ought to figure out what the plural of Neuros is...
Re:Great concept. Terrible player. (Score:2)
Why, "Neuroses", of course... Just depends on your pronunciation.
Re:Great concept. Terrible player. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Guys...seriously... (Score:2)