OFF: Re: was HW: Vinyl, t-shirts, etc. now "iPods"
Guido Vacano
nycademon at SPIRALREALM.COM
Mon Mar 19 23:09:24 EDT 2007
Okay, I'm wrong, get a Creative player. I'll stick with the limited file
formats:
Audio formats supported: AAC (16 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from
iTunes Store), MP3 (16 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 2, 3 and
4), Apple Lossless, AIFF and WAV
Bummer, no Ogg Vorbis. BTW, iTunes works fine on Windows boxes, I know
firsthand. But Creative's a great choice -- until they o out of business.
Guido
Paul Mather wrote:
> On 20 Mar 2007, at 12:09 AM, Guido Vacano wrote:
>
>> Hi Keith--
>>
>> Get an iPod. There are reasons why they're selling better than
>> Creative players. And the way Creative is going these days . . . ever
>> hear of Rio? :-) I was thinking of buying a Rio Karma a few years
>> ago. I'm very glad I didn't.
>
> Just a disclaimer: I don't own an iPod or any kind of portable music
> player (unless you count my laptop as a portable music player:). I
> mentioned Creative because their devices like the Creative Nomad hard
> drive recorder were active in the taping scene and gained respect
> before laptop recording became de rigeur. Also, on another list I'm
> on, which has an active taper contingent, Creative devices like the
> Zen are well-respected. I've also heard those devices are more likely
> to support more different file formats; I believe some Creative models
> even support FLAC natively. With the iPod, unless you replace its
> firmware, you're stuck with Apple's limited audio format support.
>
> I believe iPods sell better than Creative players because they have
> great styling and are very easy to use. But, style and ergonomics
> aside, it's fair to say you'll get more bang for your buck by buying a
> non-Apple "iPod."
>
>> BTW, you don't need to buy music from Apple. You can use iTunes to
>> rip all your CDs, and very effectively (and pleasantly) manage your
>> music library. I suspect you'd like iTunes far better than whatever
>> software package comes with Creative players.
>
> Note, though that you're pretty much stuck with iTunes if you use an
> iPod. I have an iBook and use iTunes as my music player and it works
> (unsurprisingly) superbly well. My sister has an old Windows computer
> and uses iTunes and it works terribly. (In fact, right now, it
> doesn't work at all when it comes to importing CDs as anything other
> than WAV.) So, given Keith, by his own admission, doesn't have "the
> most modern computer," he may have issues running iTunes. Because
> it's the way you interface with your iPod, he may have issues there, too.
>
> My brother can load music onto his Creative MuVo without the need for
> any additional software: just a drag and drop of files from his hard
> drive to the MuVo USB drive and then he can listen to it on the MuVo.
> You can't do that with an iPod. (You can drag and drop the files, but
> I don't think you can listen to it.) So the iPod is less convenient
> for grabbing music on the run.
>
> (His MuVo came with software; it's just that you don't NEED to use it,
> unlike the iPod.)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Paul.
>
> e-mail: paul at gromit.dlib.vt.edu
>
> "Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production
> deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid."
> --- Frank Vincent Zappa
More information about the boc-l
mailing list