188 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
188 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 34
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Title: HPR0034: Cowon D2 Review
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0034/hpr0034.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 10:32:09
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---
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…
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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This is Chess Griffin.
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In this episode I'm going to do a little review of the Kwan D2 portable media player.
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This is a device.
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It's been out about a year and I've actually had a couple Kwan products.
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I had an iAudio 5, which was just an audio player that also had a radio and the ability
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to record.
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But the Kwan D2 is a new player, like I said, it's been out about a year or so, but it's
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a great little device and I just wanted to take a few minutes to talk about it and just
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tell people about it.
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It's especially friendly to people who use operating systems other than Windows or OS
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10.
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The Kwan D2 is a video and audio player.
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It's a pretty small device.
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I'm looking at mine now.
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It's slightly bigger than square.
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It's rectangular, but it's maybe 3 inches by 2 inches by a half an inch, something like
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that.
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I think it weighs a little over 3 ounces.
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It's really small and it's got a nice color screen of, I think it's a 2.5 inch video
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screen display, 16 million color display.
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The resolution is 320x280 and it's a touch screen as well.
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For the audio, obviously this will play MP3s.
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It plays OGS, it plays Windows media files, it plays FLAQ, Waves and maybe one or two
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other codecs.
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I think it plays AACs as well, not the DRM version from the iTunes music store, but if you've
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got other audio files in AAC format, you know, Und DRM, I think it will play those as
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well.
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The video portion, well, the sound on the audio is great.
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I mean, it's just fantastic.
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There's a couple of good reviews of the Kwan out there and I'm not much of an audio file,
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but I mean, it sounds really good to me and I've had one iPod a long time ago, many years
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ago, that has since died and I think this audio quality of the Kwan's is at least equal
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to the iPods if not better.
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But the real cool thing about this device is the fact that it can play videos, I think.
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There's a lot of video players out there, but the size of this device and some of the
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features really make it stand out.
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For the movies, it'll play in AVI format and I think Windows media video format as well
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as far as the containers go.
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For the codecs, I think it will play MPG4, again, Windows media and I believe it plays X
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Vid and Divix, although I haven't tried those yet, but I'm pretty sure it does.
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I have played MPG4 files in the AVI container and it plays really well.
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Again, the resolution is 320 by 240, 30 frames a second.
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If you encode those files with MP3 audio, then of course the audio portion will play
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just fine.
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I'll come back to the video stuff in a few minutes about encoding.
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It'll also record, line in recording, external mic support, voice recording, it's got a built-in
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little teeny tiny microphone.
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I've tested the built-in microphone and it sounds okay, nothing really great, but I think
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the line in recording and the external mic support is supposed to be very good.
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The only downside to the audio recording is that it records in Windows media format.
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My old iAudio 5, I'm pretty sure, would record in MP3 format.
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I also have an iRiver 790 that records an MP3 format.
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In fact, that's what I'm recording this episode on right now, is the iRiver, but it does
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do the recording.
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And being able to record off the radio is pretty nice.
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It'll also show photos, as you would imagine, being a video player, so you can drop some
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photos, JPEGs, I think, and I don't think there's any limitation on the size or the quality
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or anything.
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It also has a pretty basic text viewer, and I think it supports up to text files up to
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two megs, and it works okay, you can read the text, although it's obviously pretty small.
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As I said, it does have a built-in FM radio, as well, which is pretty nice.
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As far as the built-in memory, this comes in in three different sizes currently, in terms
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of the internal built-in memory, two gigs, four gigs, and eight gigs, obviously flash
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bass.
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It's not a hard drive bass player.
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It also has what's great as an SD card slot, and I think it will also take MMC cards.
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I don't have any of those, but I do have a four gig SD card.
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And with a firmware upgrade, it'll take SD HC cards as well, so you can conceivably
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get this thing up pretty big with a lot of extra space.
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It is USB 2.0, high speed, in terms of connection, so that works pretty well.
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File transfer speed is like 35, 40, something like that, so it's not super fast, but it
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works.
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The battery life is pretty good.
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They rated it 52 hours charge.
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It's got a built-in rechargeable battery, so it doesn't take AA or AAA or anything.
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It's a rechargeable battery.
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They say 52 hours, I've probably gotten at least 40 hours, and I've probably gotten pretty
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close to 50.
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That's for audio playback.
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If you watch the videos, obviously the battery life will go down.
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I think they rated it 10 hours for video.
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The package, when you buy it, it includes an AC adapter.
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There's a little teeny-tunny plug on the side that you can use, and you can plug it in
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with charge using the AC, just wall outlet.
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You can also charge over USB.
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It charges much faster with the adapter than USB.
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I think a full charge on the adapter only takes like three hours, and with USB it might
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take seven to ten hours, something like that.
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But it works fine.
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As I said, it does include the AC adapter, USB cable.
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It also has TV out, which is kind of cool.
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I haven't tried that yet.
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It doesn't come with a TV out cable, though, but you can buy that.
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It will play, and some of the stuff I've read is that it plays pretty well if you attach
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it to a TV or something.
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That works really well.
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As far as encoding videos, as I said, the resolution is 320x240, and you've got to get it
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in an AVI container, MPEG4.
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What I've done with pre-existing video that I've had, a couple of different ways you can
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do it, you can obviously just manually use any kind of tool, you know, transcode or something
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like that to encode.
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There's also a little script out there, and I don't have a link for it, but I'll try to
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dig one out for the show notes.
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But if you just Google around for Kuan D2 video encoding script or something like that,
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you should come up with it.
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I actually found it linked to in the Ubuntu forms, and there's even a way you can make
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it a Nautilus script, so if you use Ubuntu and you use the Nautilus file manager, Nautilus
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has the ability to have sort of drop-in scripts that appear in the right-click context menu.
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So when I did that, I would right-click on a video, and it would say encode to Kuan D2
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or something like that, and it just worked great.
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I've got several videos on my SD card, and they play really, really well.
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No pixelation, it looks really nice, and it plays very smoothly, no chopping this or
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anything like that in the playback.
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You know, a couple other points, one nice thing about it is that obviously it just
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mounts as a USB-mash storage device, so that's great if you use Linux or BSD or something.
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It does come with some software, sort of their Kuan's version of an iTunes type of music
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jukebox software, but I've never used it, so you certainly don't need to use it, and
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it won't run on Linux, it's just I think it's Windows and Mac software.
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But since it's just USB-mash storage, it's very easy to drag and drop files, create
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folders, create a folder structure however you want.
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Within the UI, you can create playlists and all of that, I tend to just navigate through
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the folders, and that plays just fine.
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Speaking of the UI and the touch screen, the UI in all the Kuan products I've found to
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be, not as easy to use as maybe the iPod, you know, you have to press a lot of buttons
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to get to the song you want to play or something, but once you get used to it, I mean it works
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pretty well, you know, it just just takes getting used to, I guess.
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It does have the ability to resume where you left off, that's a setting I noticed was
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not enabled by default, so by default it'll not save your place, but you can do that.
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You can also save bookmarks, and you can have multiple bookmarks in video or audio files
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that you can come back to later.
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The other nice thing as far as users of Linux and BSD and stuff like that is, and I think
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this is awesome, I wish all players did this, but firmware updates are simply drag and
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drop, it's great, it works really well, basically what you do is you download a zip file with
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the firmware from the Kuan website, you know, unzip it, and it will may have, you know,
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a few different bin files for the firmware, and there's easy instructions, you basically
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just, you have to do it a few steps, so basically you would drag the first bin firmware into
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the root folder on the Kuan, and I think you then disconnect it and reboot it, and then
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you do it with the second bin file, so there might be three or four bin files in any one
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firmware upgrade, so you've got a drag and drop and reboot three or four times, but it's
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really painless, and it works perfectly from Linux, that's what I love about that, rather
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than having to, I think for my old Kuan, the I audio 5, I think I had to do the firmware
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flashes through Windows, so that was a real pain, but this doesn't require that, so it
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works great, it's a great little device as far as cost, like I said, I got the 4-meg
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version, and I think it was maybe 160 or 170, something like that, it comes in, I believe
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two or three different colors, I got the black one, I think there's white and maybe silver,
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I'm not positive with that, the screen is, like I said, it's a great screen, very, you
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know, it's a great resolution, it looks really good, it's obviously very susceptible to
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fingerprints, it came with a screen protector, it's not even really a screen protector, it's
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like, you know, when you buy stuff, it comes with a little sticky thing that it's got a
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little tab that you can peel it off, the first time you use it, I've actually left that
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on until I have time to actually buy an actual screen protector, just to kind of protect
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it, I also bought like a little rubber kind of, you know, skin for it, you know, to protect
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it a little bit, I've dropped it a couple of times, and the skin has protected it just
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fine, so that hasn't been a problem, I think it comes with a carry strap and the, you
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know, stuff like that, but I mean, that's, I don't ever use that kind of stuff.
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The other thing I'll mention is the little cover that covers up the USB port and the VGA,
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the TV out and the AC adapter plug, the whole, you know, you plug the AC adapter in, it's
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got a little plastic cover, and you got to kind of pick it off with your fingernails,
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and then it kind of extends out on a very thin little plastic, you know, string almost,
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and it's very, it's, that's the only part of this device, it seems very flimsy.
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The rest of the device seems really well constructed, and the buttons are responsive,
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and the user interface is very responsive, but overall, I mean, I think the device is
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made well, except for that little cover, but I don't ever really open it up too much
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other than to charge it, I guess, and I do all my stuff, I usually just use the SD card
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that I pop out and pop in an SD reader on my computer and just drag files onto that.
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So anyway, overall, it's a great device, I highly recommend it for the cost and for
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the features, I think you get a lot, I think I like the fact that it's very operating system
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agnostic, doesn't require any proprietary software or anything like that.
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If you listen to fair play music, which I believe is DRM music, Windows, DRM music, I don't
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know, I don't use that, but I think it will play that, so for people who do have that
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kind of stuff, it'll work, I'm pretty sure, but I don't have any DRM music to try that
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out with.
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Anyway, it's definitely a great little device, big thumbs up, check it out and play around
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with it.
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I don't think they're in any stores, I got mine on new egg, but there may be a few stores
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where you can find it, but a very cool little device, and if you get it, I hope you have
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fun.
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Alright, thanks for listening.
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