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beede688fa
Wysłany: Pon 11:46, 09 Maj 2011
Temat postu: cheap jordan 13 Tech Test IPod alternatives
s easy to comprehend the entreat of Apple Inc.'s iPod Nano music and video player: It's slim and simple to use, and it has a crisp 2-inch LCD screen. Its brand name is thought synonymous with hip tech gear.
But what if you want a player that looks assorted from those wielded by the Nano militia, costs less, includes features such as an FM radio or voice recorder, and lets you drag and drop melodies from your microprocessor desktop instead of working through Apple's iTunes software?
I tried out a handful of alternatives and found three to highlight.
All include a bevy of features and patronize multiple document types including MP3 and Windows Media (WMA) tunes, MPEG4 videos and JPEG photos.
These players are not perfect
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, but it is solacing to know there is multimedia life off Apple's planet.
Iriver Lplayer
Owing to its diminutive hotness and fairly mighty rendition along the embark, iriver's Lplayer ($100-$130) was my preference of the bunch.
The slippery little device comes with 4 or 8 gigabytes of flash memory storage. Its face consists solely of a 2-inch screen whose sides tin be pressed to control the device. The only buttons -- for power and volume -- are tiny and located discreetly on an side.
There's also an easy-to-miss hold alternate on the Lplayer's behind.
The controls were a mini confusing at the outset, as I initially presumed clicking the navel of the shade would serve as a sort of "enter" or "play" clasp (it doesn't). But once I got accustomed to it, I liked the simplicity.
The Lplayer's screen is sunny, and photos and videos looked fairly frail.
I would have favored better image quality, merely it was good ample that I enjoyed discerning a 15-minute video when commuting family.
My music sounded pretty good on the Lplayer, and while I wouldn't ambition to peruse a novel on the little screen, its support because files in the "TXT" text format make it a good location to keep uncomplicated notes.
I'm routinely not a flare of included media player software, but I liked the neat, uncluttered look of the iriver software and found it fairly simple to use.
Though this device was the fattest of the cluster, being a morsel larger than a Zippo lighter averaged it also was the easiest to hold in my palm.
Its power cell can deal 12 hours of music playback (3 1/2 hours of video playback) -- still far less than the up to 24 hours of audio (or 5 hours of video) that the Nano boasts, but enough for a airplane ride or a daytime spent out and about.
Sansa Fuze
Of the minimultimedia players I tested, the Sansa Fuze ($80-$130) looks most like the current-generation Nano.
But where the Apple device paints you in with a crystal-clear LCD, the Fuze attempts a subpar, 1.9-inch display.
The Fuze's screen was abundance bright, but images did not look crisp and were plagued by what looked like svelte vertical lines across the face.
This made it annoying to outlook photos and videos, and would corner me off from watching something longer than a YouTube-length mow.
The Fuze got points for its more orthodox set of controls and rubbery-feeling clickwheel
air jordan 2011
, which made it easier to operate than the others.
I had not problem scrolling through tunes alternatively the device's cardinal list, and could guide faster than on the additional players I tested.
The Fuze likewise scores with its microSD slot namely lets consumers inflate the player's flash memory capability (embodied memory ranges from 2 apt 8 gigabytes).
This is important to me, as I tend to swap microSD cards among my compartment phone and digital camera and like being able to shake photos and MP3s with ease.
I encountered a strange problem with JPEG photos on a microSD card, whereas, as the Fuze 1st told me it didn't support the file type. But it does: It presently continued to show me the photos.
Those looking for capacity at a cheap amount will note that the 8-gigabyte Fuze prices less than the 4-gigabyte Nano, which costs $149.
Also, the player is rated for up to 24 hours of music playback (or five hours of video playback), which is right up
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