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On Tue, Jan 31, 2006 at 11:13:22AM -0500, Gordon Marx wrote: > On 31/01/06, David Hummel <dhml at comcast.net> wrote: > > http://olduvai.blu.org/pipermail/discuss/2006-January/024549.html > > The thread is singularly unhelpful, as only one person has chimed in > with actual personal experience. I find it hard to believe that only > one person on the entire BLU list has a portable music player. Digging > up this topic for further discussion seems completely reasonable. > Here's my actual personal experience. About a year ago I studied the state of the market. I wanted a device to play music for me while I was taking the T, and I didn't want to spend a lot of money. Linux compatibility was absolutely vital. Compatibility with any online music store was a non-issue -- 90% of my music is ripped from my own CDs, and the remainder is MP3 format podcasts, DJ shows and so forth. Battery life was a significant factor. I was going to carry it around in a pocket, backpack or attache all the time, so size and weight were mildly significant. For $40 I bought a Panasonic MP3/CD player with a remote, and I spent another $35 on Sony MDR-EX71 earphones, which are highly recommended by Siegfried Linkwitz ( http://www.linkwitzlab.com/reference_earphones.htm ). Here's my rationale: - CDRs are quite cheap, especially when you buy them a hundred at a time from CostCo on sale. Storing 700MB is enough for about 75 high-quality songs, about 5 hours worth per disc. If I like a set, I can keep it permanently. If I hate it, I don't mind having lost a disc. - I can carry a standard CD wallet with 15 or 20 discs and not notice it, especially. - At 52x, I can burn a full data CD in less than 3 minutes. It takes longer than that to choose songs to put on it, unless I'm dropping a few complete albums. - The player fits in my jacket pocket quite nicely. There's a remote inline with the headphone cord that will clip to a shirt or pocket or whatever; that means I rarely take the player out, except to change discs. - Battery life is around 80 hours of playtime on 2 AAs. Yes, really. I often go a month between battery changes. The antiskip buffer holds raw MP3 data, so it has several minutes of music stored in RAM rather than 30 seconds or so. - Finally, it also plays normal CDs -- the most common form of music distribution media on the planet. If I buy an album in a store, I can listen to it immediately, before ripping it. - One more: our car has an MP3 CD player, so discs are cross-compatible. -dsr-
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