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Audio/Video, Handheld Devices

Grenade MP3 Player Looks a Bit Too Realistic for Most

Grenade MP3 Player Looks a Bit Too Realistic for Most
If you're tired of boring MP3 players that look like ... well ... MP3 players, check out this custom
model made by a man who goes by the moniker openfly. It's a 1GB Sansa Clip stuffed into the casing of a mock grenade that, if not for the three protruding buttons, switch, and headphone cable, would be more or less indistinguishable from the real thing. openfly cut open the casing, stuffed the player inside (pictured after the break) re-wired the inputs and outputs, and the above package is the result. Sadly, 1GB of music won't get you too far these days, but grenades were always more about impact than range. [From: OhGizmo!]

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Audio/Video, Computers, TV

Take TV Lets You Easily Watch Your PC Videos On Any TV

Take TV and Fanfare Announced by SanDisk

Loading up a PC with (legally or illegally) downloaded copies of TV shows and movies has become quite the norm for many people. The problem is watching the latest cinematic, special effects blockbuster on your 17-inch computer monitor isn't exactly the pulse-raising experience it was meant to be. We're also pretty sure the cheap-o Staples swivel chair isn't the most comfortable place for watching a two hour epic. And though perfectly doable, streaming TV shows to a media extender or plugging your computer into your TV isn't always the most seamless or easy thing to do.

With the introuction of the Sansa Take TV, SanDisk is hoping you'll forget about that temperamental home Wi-Fi network and glitchy media extender. Why? Because the SanDisk Sansa Take TV is simple and straightforward. It's essentially a USB flash drive with built-in video playing capabilities. You plug the Take TV into the USB port on your PC and just drag and drop video files to it. Afterwards, you physically move the Take TV to the included portable A/V dock, which connects the conventional way to any TV, and presto, you've got 'Dexter.'

The best thing about Take TV is how small it is -- not much bigger than a standard USB drive, and the dock and remote fold up nicely for carrying with you anywhere (in fact the remote control serves as the cover for the whole thing when not in use).


To coincide and pair with the Take TV, SanDisk is launching Fanfare, a video downloading service with both free (ad supported) and for-pay content from CBS, Showtime, and, for some reason that we don't quite understand, the Weather Channel.

The 4 Gigabyte Take TV costs $99 and stores roughly five hours of video, while the 8 Gigabyte runs $149 for about 10 hours. Both models are availale online from the SanDisk Web site.

We saw the Take TV at last year's Consumer Electronics Show and it was one of our top picks at the show. Since it specializes in Flash drives, SD cards, and other forms of memory (not to mention the excellent Sansa Connect), SanDisk is reliable in this area of portable memory, storage, and playback. Despite the paltry selection of TV shows on its Fanfare service (for now, at least, since it's in beta), SanDisk may well have a winner with Take TV.

How about you? Would you rather carry this little USB-drive sized device and plug it into your TV or would you prefer lug around an iPod and an iPod video dock?


From SanDisk.

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Audio/Video, iPod

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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Audio/Video

Rumor: True Wireless for the Zune



When Microsoft released the Zune, the company made damn sure in its ads and marketing materials to play up the media player's wireless capabilities. Problem is, the Wi-Fi features are limited, only allowing you to share songs with the other dude who bought a Zune.

But according to rumors, a forthcoming update will enable Zune users to buy tunes wirelessly. This is likely a reaction on Microsoft's part to positive reviews garnered by the recently released Sansa Connect, a portable player that's able to stream music, buy tunes and even browse Flickr wirelessly. And with rumors of a Wi-Fi iPod floating around the ether, this update can't come soon enough.

The rumor also speculates about the release of a so-called Zune 2.0, as well as a flash-based "Nano" Zune, within the next month.

From Engadget

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Audio/Video, iPod

Wi-Fi iPod Coming?

WiFi iPodUSI is hardly a household name, but there's a good chance that you own a product or two manufactured by the company. USI is the primary manufacturer for Apple, and it has hinted it will be building an updated iPod for the company that includes Wi-Fi.
Details are scant, and there is no mention of a touch screen or how the Wi-Fi features will be implemented.

Apple is usually lauded for being innovative and ahead of the curve technologically, but it will be among the last to hop on the Wi-Fi-enabled media player bandwagon. Music Gremlin was one of the first, pioneering the use of the wireless technology in the media player field. Now everyone from Microsoft to Archos has stuffed a Wi-Fi module into their players. And yet, who cares? The iPod was hardly the first jukebox-style digital audio player when it first came out in 2001, but it was thanks to Apple that the technology became the global success that it is today. Will Apple do the same for wireless music?

We all just have to hope that the Wi-Fi iPod will be more Sansa Connect and less Microsoft Zune.

From Crunch Gear

Audio/Video, iPod, Reviews

We Almost Forgot: Sansa Connect

Whoa, in all our excitement about our launch, we totally spaced on one of the most exciting new products of the year: The SanDisk Sansa Connect, which finally hit stores on Friday. The cell-phone-sized digital audio player was one of our top five picks at the Consumer Electronics Show, where SanDisk made the official announcement and showed off an early version of the device.

Why were we so thrilled? Mainly, because it's a real Microsoft Zune-killer, and quite possibly an iPod-killer, and here's why: It's got built-in Wi-Fi that you can actually use to either stream Internet radio stations or download subscription ("for rent") tunes off of Yahoo! Music Unlimited (or any other PlaysForSure-compatible online music store such as Urge). You can also buy songs and download them wirelessly right to the player. The Zune, on the other hand, only lets you use Wi-Fi to swap songs temporarily between other Zune users. And, for now anyway, the iPod has no wireless capabilities.

But what really sets the Sansa Connect apart from all the other digital audio players that aren't the iPod or the Zune is its responsive controls and user-friendly onscreen menu--a functionality issue that most iPod (and Zune) competitors rarely seem to address.

Luckily for us, Engadget got its hands on a device on Friday. You can check out its review, which is mostly positive with a few complaints (about, for example, the Connect's limited, pre-selected Internet radio stations).

Now, we just got one of these babies, and we're going to give it a thorough test drive over the course of a week and get back to you, to see if it really lives up the the hype (and whether it's really good enough to make you dump your iPod).

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