the sony net MD quandary
i'm looking at buying one of the sony net MD players. they look to be a great portable music option (as low as $129 on some models, with roughly 6 hours of digital music on each disk) for those of us that don't want to shell out $300 plus on an ipod. the only problem is will it work with the mac? do i need to use their software to copy music to it from my machine, which is windows only? or can i simply dump music to it an be done?
Comments
not worth the effort... plus you cant sort by anything from the MD you have a playlist and that is your only option when playing (that and shuffle...) <img src="graemlins/oyvey.gif" border="0" alt="[No]" />
get a used iPod... much better all around
i walked into a store & asked if i could record
using a net md & sales guy says sure
I wanted to record myself on the guitar.
then i ask if i can output that to a pc for
processing and....BLEEP..."sorry sir it wont
let you do that in case you steal music"
duh~~.......they lost my business right there
& then...
whats the point of having recording on net md
eg lectures etc etc if you cant play them anywhere
else or save them......
stick with the ipod...doesnt record but doesnt
shove drm down your throat either.
2) I do not agree with Paul. The new net MD's offer 'fast transfer' meaning: they use the entire bandwidth of the USB (up to five mbit/s, is it?). This in contrast to earlier models, where the USB served only as real-time bridge.
3) Another option you could consider, MadMax, the ARCHOS jukebox (as I guess they are called). Up to 20 GB HD mp3 player AND RECORDER.
The only downside I have noticed so far: USB only (so quite slow if you want to put 20 GB on there, but then again: you don't need to do that every day).
If you should decide to buy one, I would definitely like to know how they are.
It can get confusing because some buses (i.e. SCSI) measure their throughput in MB (megabytes) per second (Ultra160, Ultra320 have 160MB and 320MB per second, respectively), whereas others (like USB, FireWire, and Ethernet) measure it in Mbit (Megabits) per second. There are 8 bits to a byte, so there are 8 megabits to a megabyte.
I'd be concerned about a hard drive based MP3 player that uses only USB1.1, because you'd have to spend so much time transferring the music that you will spin the hard drive for a lot longer, causing a shorter life. USB1.1 works fine for those little Rio players that take compact flash cards, because their capacity is only 32-128MB usually.
Incidentally, I talked to someone in my Calc class today who has an MD player. He really likes it. He tells me that the player itself can get MP3s from his computer and then burn them at 32x speed onto his little rewriteable discs, which can store up to 5 hours of music (depending on the bitrate; he says there's no real difference between the highest quality and the medium setting, though he's not tried the lowest one yet).
Okay, so this post wasn't too well-written... but I hope you got something useful from it!