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World's First MP3 Player Is 10 Years Old

The MP3 Player Turns 10 This Month
It's amazing how quickly pieces of technology can become not only an accepted, but also indispensable parts of everyday life. It's hard to believe, but the MP3 player, now more accurately called the Digital Audio Player (DAP) or Personal Media Player (PMP), is 10 years old. Of course, most people just call it the iPod, but that's a whole other story.

It was back in March of 1998 that the world first got a glimpse of the MPMan F10 at the CeBit tech trade show in Hanover, Germany. The prototype garnered enough attention that, by May of that year, the Korean company Saehan Information Systems was mass producing the devices. By summer of 1998, the 32-megabyte (MB) flash device was on sale in the U.S. for $250.

At 3.6 x 2.75 x 6.5-inches, the MPMan was significantly larger than any media player on the market right now, save some of the largest wide screen video players. The Walkman-sized-device could only hold a small handful of songs, and its display was only slightly fancier than your standard digital alarm clock.

By now, of course, Saehan Information Systems and its MPMan are all but forgotten. In fact, many mistakenly point to the Diamond Multimedia Rio PMP300 as the first commercially available MP3 player, but the MPMan beat that CD-player-sized wonder to market by several months.

The bulkiness and limited capabilities of both devices may make them seem quaint when compared to your 32-gigabyte (1000 times the capacity of the original MPMan) iPod Touch, but these archaic devices helped spark a revolution that has completely changed the way we buy and consume music and media.



From Register Hardware (via Engadget)

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DVDs Now Come With Computer Video Files for PC's and Video Players

DVD's Start Shipping with Video Files for PC's and PMP's
Looks like the movie studios are finally joining the 21st century while looking to preempt illegal ripping and sharing of movies via peer to peer networks. The proliferation of video-capable personal media players has made carrying your movie collection with you not only reasonable but popular.

Until now the only way to bring your movies with you legally was to rip your movies yourself, which can be a difficult and convoluted process. Or, as many have chosen, you could let someone else do the work and download movies via BitTorrent or some other file-sharing network.

With the release 'Live Free or Die Hard,' studios have begun including Windows media-encoded versions of movies that can be copied from the DVD to your computer or media player. Reportedly, the files have no DRM copy protection. However, a 16-digit code will be needed to download and unlock the file.

This feature doesn't end with 'Die Hard' thankfully. The 'Digital Copy' will be extended to future Fox releases, and Warner Home Video plans to introduce a similar program beginning with 'Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix' in December.

From BetaNews

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Sony Launches New Walkman Video Players



Thanks to the iPod's success, and Sony's bumbling, the legendary Walkman brand has seen its prominence in the marketplace diminish, but don't ring the death knell yet. Today, Sony started selling two new Walkman models that offer increased flexibility over previous models and are the first ones to offer video. Sure, it's almost two years since Apple first launched video capability on the iPod, but better late than never.

The new models -- the $230 NWZ-A810 and the $210 NWZ-S610 -- play AVC/H.264 and MPEG-4 video formats, which means you should be able to play downloaded YouTube videos and video podcasts, as well as movie trailers available on Sony's Web site (doesn't look like it'll work with the movies and TV shows available at the online download stores like Amazon Unbox or Wal-Mart). Music-wise, the players are more open, offering compatibility with PlaysForSure files you might rent or subscribe to at Yahoo! Music Unlimited or Napster, as well as non-iTunes-purchased AAC files and MP3 files (those you burn yourself or buy off of places like eMusic).

As is the case with pretty much every other media player out there, both models also support JPEG image files.

Design-wise, these new players look to be ho-hum versus what we've come to expect from Sony. Both models resemble conventional cell-phones, which makes think we'd rather just have cell phones.

Crunchgear got an early hands-on look at these players and was impressed with their clutter-free, user-friendly interface (and, for more pictures, go to Engadget).

Still, we think that until these babies can play the videos you can buy off of places like Amazon Unbox or Wal-Mart, they're unlikely to make much of a dent in either the iPod's business or even the business of personal-media-player-manufacturers such as Archos or Creative (with its versatile Zen players).

And let's not forget that next week (September 5th, to be exact), Apple will likely announce some new iPods.

From Sony.

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Do You Own a Non-iPod?

Amazon Creates Non-iPod Category for Music Players

If ever there was a sign of the iPod's ubiquity it's this: Amazon has separated out the iPod from the rest of the media player pack and created its own 'non-iPod' category to house the rest. Zunes, Creative Visions and all of the rest of them have been relegated to this generic category. Really, this is just confirmation of what we already knew: that the iPod has won.

The iPod has become the digital audio player. Some may tell you that there's no point buying anything but an iPod; others use iPod as a universal term to describe any audio player. There may be hundreds of non-iPod music players available, but sometimes it seems as if they just don't matter. We might just start referring to everything as a non-iPod. For example, "My non-iPod celebrated her 80th birthday this weekend."

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New Sony PSP Plays Games and Movies On Your TV



Apple may have its iPhone, but Sony is doing its best to make the PlayStation Portable (PSP) a more compelling buy for lovers of all things portable entertainment. Yesterday, the company unveiled an updated version of its handheld gaming device, which is about 19 percent slimmer and a third lighter than the current model (about 3/4-inch thick and almost 1/2 pounds heavy).

Besides size and weight, the main improvements are longer battery life, more onboard memory, and the ability to play games, pictures, and movies on your TV (thanks to a video out slot).

Sure, pretty much every portable media player from the versatile Archos 704 to the user-friendly iPod already offer video out capabilities, but we still applaud Sony for adding these improvements to the new PSP. It's another bone thrown to the numerous folks who bought into the Sony eco-system (and its proprietary UMD discs for movies) when they bought the PSP years ago (and let's not forget that the PlayStation 2 is still the world's best-selling game console.)

The new device's lesser size and weight also help make it seem more like a fun portable, rather than a delicate, expensive toy. Add to that a raft of cool new games announced yesterday, including 'Wipeout Pulse' (the popular futuristic hovercraft racer returns!), 'echochrome' (an intriguing 3-D scroller featuring stick figures and minimal graphics), and 'SOCOM: Tactical Strike,' and the PSP might just have a chance at keeping up with Nintendo's more successful DS handheld.

For the hardcore fans, Sony will also release the Star Wars Battlefront PSP, a limited edition ceramic white PSP emblazoned with a Darth Vader silk screen, as well as a silver-colored Daxter PSP.


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Microsoft Readying an 80 Gigabyte Zune?

Microsoft Readying an 80 Gigabyte Zune?
The Zune fan blog, Zune Scene, (who knew such a thing exists?) is citing a "source from inside the hallowed halls of Microsoft," claiming that an 80 gigabyte Zune is on the way. This beefier model, code-named "Scorpio," will join the four and eight gigabyte flash-based versions also rumored to be on the way. Zune Scene claims production will begin in July and that the new Zunes will be ready for public consumption by the holidays.

From Zune Scene via Engadget

iRiver NV Does it All

iRiver NV Does it All
iRiver, makers of the fantastic Clix line of Personal Media Players (PMP), has unleashed its new iRiver NV PMP, which integrates GPS navigation into a sturdy, feature-filled player. Here's, the skinny on the new device:

The Good:
  • A seven inch, 840x480 LED backlit display that's twice the resolution of your Video iPod.
  • The industry standard SiRF GPS chip. It's the industry standard for a reason.
  • An FM tuner, in case you get bored of your library of tunes and videos. An FM transmitter beams your tunes to nearby speakers.
  • A 1.3 megapixel camera that automatically tags your photos with coordinates from the GPS receiver.
  • Some of the most thorough format playback we've ever seen, AVI (Divx, Xvid, MPEG-4, H.264), ASF, WMV, MPG, MPEG, DAT, MP3, WMA, OGG, AC3, BSAC.
The Bad:
  • It's only available in Korea.
  • What, no phone?
And The Ugly:
  • That dial. We think it this is a love it or hate it situation, but that bulbous dial attached to this sleek device just sticks in our craw.
From Engadget

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Motorola's iPhone Killer Coming Tuesday


Competition is the heart of the capitalist system. Just ask Motorola CEO Ed Zander, who says that the iPhone is helping to stimulate the cell phone market.

Zander has accepted Apple's challenge and announced that Motorola will introduce a media-centric iPhone competitor on Tuesday. Unlike the iPhone, the Motorola phone will feature 3G capability for blazing fast Internet. The phone will also come with an SD slot, which Motorola plans to fill with preloaded video and audio.

It seems like everybody and their mother wants in on the iPhone action these days. We'll just have to wait until Tuesday to see if Motorola has a worthy competitor, or just another flashy wannabe.

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From Tech Crunch

Pink Zunes Return for Mother's Day

Last November -- when the Zune first arrived on the scene -- Microsoft secretly stashed limited edition hot pink and orange versions of the player into boxes and stirred up a bit of a ruckus.

Now the company has decided to revive the revive the pink Zune, with a less hot and more subdued shade. The pink double-shot case carries all the same features you've come to expect/revile in the would-be iPod killer from Redmond -- namely, the ability to share songs with nearby friends via Wi-Fi -- in a decidedly more girly package.

The players will be available through Best Buy by month's end, and are already available for order through Amazon.com.

From Beta News

Zune 2.0 Rumor Mill

Tech blogs Zunescene, Gizmodo,and Engadget are all abuzz with rumors about the next generation of the Microsoft's beleaguered PMP (Personal Media Player), the Zune. Supposedly originating from an employee who worked on Zune 2.0, the rumors are not particularly exciting.

The hard-drive-based Zune will get a little thinner and will keep the admittedly cool double-shot plastic body. There will also be a flash-memory-based player in the Zune 2.0 family. Flash-based memory means the player will be small, supposedly weighing in at 3 x 1.25 x 0.25-inches with a screen that takes up a vast majority of the face. The mini-Zune will also purportedly be video-capable.

Of course, none of this is confirmed, though the lack of innovation somehow makes this story all that much more believable.

Microsoft may want to check out an earlier post about a little gadget from a company called Sansa... It might give them some ideas about how to leverage that whole Wi-Fi-plus-media-player idea.

From Engadget


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