iRiver Adds Ogg To Audio Player Firmware 210
Sesse writes "iRiver has just released firmware updates for its iFP-300T and iFP-500T flash memory-based audio player series. According to a news story on their site, this update includes features 'supporting the Ogg file format', so it looks like iRiver
can finally be added to the quickly growing list of
Vorbis-capable
hardware!"
But (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But (Score:1, Insightful)
Special Xmas version (Score:3, Funny)
Re:But (Score:2)
"Best player EVER"
Re:No-one is safe from.... (Score:2)
great (Score:2, Funny)
Re:great (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:great (Score:2)
LOL (Score:2)
and just in time for christmas... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:and just in time for christmas... (Score:3, Funny)
Don't worry about Christmas. You can buy yourself a present anytime.
Looks good. (Score:1, Insightful)
One thing to note, though, is that if you encode your Ogg to reasonable quality (500Kbps) this patch isn't going to support you, so you will have to use a converter (they will soon provide for free) to actually downsample the music. I guess it's portable, so it isn't like I'm listening to the
Re:Looks good. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Etymotic ER-4P Headphones - The best! (Score:2)
I bought a pair of ES-4 earphones because they were the only things I could find that looked like they would work underneath my motorcycle helmet. They did, mostly at least. Hurts a bit to take the helmet off but hey... I only need to do that once or twice a day anyway.
They sound awsome... and with 29 db noise reduction, nothing says "I am not listning to you" quite like the completely oblivious expression of someone who can't even hear
Re:Looks good. (Score:5, Insightful)
500kbps is not 'reasonable quality' for Oggs. The encoder isn't tuned particularly well about about 200kbps, so anything higher is only giving marginal improvements and wasting a lot of space. Add to that the fact that above 160kbps Ogg becomes tricky to differentiate from the original, and certainly by 192 or thereabouts it's as close to perfect as it's likely to get.
Re:Looks good. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
CD player upgrade due in January, too ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Shame about the 96kbs floor, though -- that's far more than I need for audiobooks. Still, CDs are cheap enough I should not complain.
timothy
Re:CD player upgrade due in January, too ... (Score:2)
Why not just get a Karma? My Dad got one for my brother the other day and now I'm thinking about killing him so I can have it. It is so much nicer than my Neuros. The only thing I'd miss would be the ability to record and the FM broadcast, but we can't have everything we want. Anyway, I loaded all of my Vorbis stuff onto it and it plays great. I synced it with my stuff because my brother owns like half of the same music I do and the Windows box doesn't have enough disk space to be able to rip onto; my uncle
Re:CD player upgrade due in January, too ... (Score:2, Informative)
b) hard drives. Yes, a hard drive can hold a lot more than a CD, and I'm not generally going to be carrying 30 CDs of Ogg Vorbis files around, but I still like the flexibi
Re:CD player upgrade due in January, too ... (Score:2)
Beats me - I just did.
Re:CD player upgrade due in January, too ... (Score:2)
Hey, that sounds like a certain Nigerian scam!
But with Koreans. And Ogg.
iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
And this is different from every other company how?
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:1)
No no no, Apple doesn't want their money. They can give it to iRiver or someone.
Pratchett (Score:4, Funny)
You do not have to use Linux to appreciate Vorbis [amazon.co.uk];-)
Re:Pratchett (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
It's worse than that. Apple could push a free, open, DRM-free standard if they wanted too. With Apple behind it, ogg could gain some traction in the marketplace.
It's not going to happen.
As far as I can tell, Apple doesn't really even like MP3. They'd like us to move over to thier own format, full of proprietary DRM goodness. Promoting or even supporting another open form
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
Because MP3 is proprietary. Ogg Vorbis is free, in every sense of the word. It's also technically better, which is nice.
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
Ok, rephrased; why would it make financial sense for a company to flood the market with another audio standard when MP3 is the defacto standard everyone has come to know and love?
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2)
I don't use Linux, but I prefer Vorbis because it sounds better for the same file size as an mp3, and I know that Fraunhofer will never be able to start charging royalties on Vorbis [en/de]coders.
Thats the worst argument ever (Score:2)
(Hint: none)
Apple users will take whatever Jobs shovels at them, assuming the quality is acceptable and its "blessed" by Apple.
The real asnwer is this: DRM.
They wont offer unencumbered format support, aside from those with massive user demand (read MP3), if they dont have to.
Think of the iPod as a tie in to iTunes music store, they certainly want to steer you towards the encumbered formats.
If quality was the only concern, it would be ogg+vorbis support w
Re:Thats the worst argument ever (Score:3, Informative)
(a) You're confusing AC-3 with AAC. Two totally different beasts. DVDs use AC-3, while the iPod uses AAC.
(b) The 'l33t' audiophiles were using AAC long before Apple decided to add support to the iPod. Granted, it wasn't anywhere near as popular as MP3, or even Vorbis, but there was some demand. Actually, my RioVolt's (circa 1999 or so?) instruction manual has an entry about AAC in the glossary, heh.
(c) Though the rest of your post may be fairly correct (especially the part about why they'll go wi
Re:Thats the worst argument ever (Score:2)
(b)- I would imagine leet audiophiles think even CD's are already lossily encoded, much less accept more loss on top of that.
(c)- vorbis and mp3 are competing for the compressed music niche, if you want high bitrates switch to flac or something.
Re:Thats the worst argument ever (Score:2)
Lol. The iTMS doesn't make any money. You've got it backwards. The iTMS is a trojan horse to sell iPods, not the other way around. Supporting OGG or WMA on the iPod wouldn't hurt Apple (except in the pride department with WMA). On the other hand, what Apple won't ever do is offer WMA downloads from the iTMS, because the only reason iTMS exists is to sell iPods. Offering WMA files would allow people to use t
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:5, Informative)
Apple's Ipod uses dedicated MP3 decoder and controller chip from PortalPlayer
You can read all about the innards at: Inside The Apple Ipod Design Triumph [designchain.com]
I'm not even an Ipod fan and I know this
Sunny Dubey
Re:iRiver sure, but what about Apple? (Score:2, Informative)
Apple will never add ogg support to the iPod? (Score:2)
In my opinion, never.
The iPod can play MP3 files becuase without it, the iPod would be dead in the water. However, what Apple really want is for you to migrate over to iTunes and Apple's very own proprietary, DRM-encrusted format, where you don't really own the files and can't play them on your machine when you upgrade the motherboard, and suchlike drivel. Suprisingly, it seems to be working so far.
Support for
Terrific... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Terrific... (Score:2)
yeah, but... (Score:3, Funny)
...something tells me that hot redhead has no idea what an iRiver is, much less ogg-vorbis. I bet she knows what an iPod is!
Re:yeah, but... (Score:2)
I sold my iPod for an iRiver and never looked back. Better sound, better interface, AA batteries, excellent FM tuners and recorder.
When everybody has an iPod, you know there's something better out there. Many iPod fans are simply too excited about the idea that they can afford it.
Yay! (Score:1)
...right?
How about AAC (Score:2)
Re:How about AAC (Score:2)
aac? oh, er, nevermind
Happy Holidays, world
We need more manufacturers supporting open formats (Score:5, Insightful)
But producers of audio-playback devices are stuck with a problem: because the vast bulk of digital sound out there stored on PCs is in MP3 format, they have to support MP3, and both Microsoft and Apple are not helping by pushing users to their own particular patented formats, thus providing little incentive to support an open format. This causes problems: it encourages people to continue using the closed formats, and that in turn encourages manufacturers to only support the closed formats. This is wrong, seriously wrong, and serious issues of liberty - both personal and civil - are at stake here. For without an open format, the plug can be pulled.
This quagmire of open formats dying because they need to dominate the market before they can dominate the market will not disappear by itself. Resources need to be devoted, and unless people are prepared to actually act, not just talk about it on Slashdot, nothing will ever get done. Apathy is not an option.
You can help by getting off your rear and writing to your congressman [house.gov] or senator [senate.gov]. Tell them that free and open music is important to you. Tell them that you appreciate the work being done by the open source and free software communities to create an infrastructure that will support truly free - as in liberty - music, but that if the problem of lack of commercial support for open file formats is not resolved, you will be forced to use less and less secure and intelligently designed alternatives. Let them know that SMP may make or break whether you can efficiently deploy OpenBSD on your workstations and servers. Explain the concerns you have about freedom, openness, and choice, and how patented file formats harms all three. Let them know that this is an issue that effects YOU directly, that YOU vote, and that your vote will be influenced, indeed dependent, on their policies on open file formats.
You CAN make a difference. Don't treat voting as a right, treat it as a duty. Keep informed, keep your political representatives informed on how you feel. And, most importantly of all, vote.
Re:We need more manufacturers supporting open form (Score:1)
I'm obviously mistaking these guys as people who know something about audio. I suppose these are issues better settled by my congressman and/or sen
Re:We need more manufacturers supporting open form (Score:2, Insightful)
No, it isn't. That's not a remotely fair comparison.
AAC, WMA, and MP3 are licensed formats. Someone without a license cannot produce a coder, media in that format, or player, or if they're able to do so n
Re:We need more manufacturers supporting open form (Score:1, Insightful)
MP3 and ACC, like pretty much everything else that comes out of the MPEG, are pattented, but the formats are completely open and well documented complete with sample code.
Their liscences are focused on getting money, for the algorythims they spent their time and money developing, from the people who make money off of their work: comercial software and streaming systems with thousands of clients. They generally don't c
Re:We need more manufacturers supporting open form (Score:2)
Re:We need more manufacturers supporting open form (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:LAME? (Score:2)
Expandable? (Score:3, Interesting)
It appears that these players only have internal flash memory. So, I'm guessing that they're not expandable?
In any case, are these Mac compatible? If they can be setup as a universal-storage USB device (?), I would think so.
Re:Expandable? (Score:2, Informative)
iRiver is great about releasing new firmware though, and it is very easy to upgrade. They release 2 different firmware actually, one which requires Windows software to interact with, the other of which makes the device appears as a USB Mass Storage Device (UMS). If you use the UMS firmware it will work perfectly in Linux, Mac, etc.
(Note: This new firmware that supports ogg is only released in manager format, not UMS. The UMS version is coming soon according to the sit
Re:Expandable? (Score:2)
Re:Expandable? (Score:2)
Not that I have any particular reason to try either, but does it also prevent you from copying Oggs off the device?
BTW, thanks for all your replies -- it's rather tempting to get one of these. The flash-based players would probably work well for me, but I still wish they'd release Mac software for the iHP-120 ;).
Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now I am getting good use out of gnupod/gtkpod for my iPod, but would love to see more vendor support from day one for linux.
Re:Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:2)
Re:Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:3, Informative)
The Rio Karma works well with GNU/Linux, but you have to install the actual Sun JDK (I guess Blackdown would probably work too, I don't use Java at all so I don't really know) to use it because the Java version of the software uses a few methods which haven't be implemented in GNU Classpath yet. You just bring it up on the network, set a network password, point your browser towards it, download the "Rio Manager Lite" software, unzip, and run.
I'm thinking about getting one once GNU Classpath has better sup
Re:Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:2)
The IRiver IHP-120 does not need special software, you can index all files using the player itself.
Re:Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:2)
Because there aren't good apps to connect to all of the major players.
Because manufacturers should cater to growing markets with out-of-the-box support.
Re:Linux support more important than Ogg to me (Score:2)
i don't care how it happens, i just want these players to allow me to copy music from my linux box.
What Increase Does This Represent? (Score:1)
Professor Voice: Good news everyone! Ogg Vorbis doubled their hardware list this year! There are now two compatible players.
I kid, I kid. As an iPod owner and Windows/OS X user, MP3 and AAC meet my needs. I could get Vorbis players for my desktop and laptop computers, but I'd also miss out on tossing that odd MP3 file to a friend.
I have a hard enough time trying to get my tech savvy friends to use an
Re:What Increase Does This Represent? (Score:2, Informative)
Does this mean that iRiver has... (Score:3, Funny)
Tim
Not a new thing for iRiver! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Not a new thing for iRiver! (Score:2)
Re:Not a new thing for iRiver! (Score:2, Informative)
Why now, huh? (Score:2)
Re:Why now, huh? (Score:2)
Nothing's wrong with that. Making your product more desireable to customers is what makes capitalism work. I wish the RIAA understood that. If you sell people what they want for a price they are willing to pay then you are doing good.
I started reripping my music collection to OggVorbis in anticipation of this release (which was announced a couple
Stupid iRiver. I love you so. (Score:3, Interesting)
I love to put alot of research into products before I buy them, and the iRiver is one of the few products I've come across with *very* few negative reviews. It makes changing to a newer player kind of unnerving, especially with the kind of dedication the Firmware developers are putting in. Actually listening to customer requests.
Incidentally, if any iRiver reps are listening, (IMO) you really need to redesign your HDD players, the features are so nice, but the design is so poor. Why an LCD on the main unit with the quality of iRiver remotes?
About Ogg support for their other devices (Score:5, Informative)
As someone else here already said, the iMP-400 and iMP-550 (IIRC) will get Ogg support in January. I'm certainly looking forward to it. As soon as they release the firmware, I'm going to buy one of those devices, I guess.
It looks like some things didn't really go as planned, with the iFP-300 support coming so quickly. But hey, isn't that good?
Meh. (Score:2, Funny)
The first time it was iNteresting.
The second time it was iRritating
Now it's just iDiotic.
iRiver's Ogg support plan (Score:2, Informative)
Why, why, why??? (Score:2)
First off, why would anyone get a compactflash based player? CompactFlash is incredibly expensive.
The second issue applies to (almost) any type of media.
Sure, maybe now you don't have to bring a dozen CDs for your music, but you've only changed what you *do* have to carry around... Instead of carrying CDs, you have to carry tons of batteries, since the battery life on all solid-state digital players is terribly shor
Re:Why, why, why??? (Score:2)
I can't speak for solid state, but my hard drive based, internal li-ion batteried Lyra gets 15 hours off a battery charge. 15 hours. That's almost as long as most people are awake during an average day. Listening to music the entire time.
I'd guess that solid state devices use less power than ones with moving parts, so add to the 15 hours. I don't think carrying around
Re:Why, why, why??? (Score:2)
Well a dozen would hold more than enough to consume your entire battery-life.
It's funny that you think 12Hr batterylife is good enough, but having 12 hours of music isn't... Hmm.
But the situation remains. You are just swapping CDs with Batteries.
Re:Why, why, why??? (Score:2)
Come home, plug in mp3 player. Next day, it's charged. Every day, anything I want to listen to is at my fingertips.
As opposed to, come home, try to decide what I want to listen to the next day, load it up, next day, hope I still want to listen to that.
Night and day. Do people even think before they post anymore?
Re:Why, why, why??? (Score:2)
Speex would be nice too (Score:2, Interesting)
For recording voice & FM it would be great to have a decent speech encoder instead of the inefficient ADPCM WAV available. If Vorbis only goes down to 96kbps on this thing then that is not suitable for voice. In fact, Vorbis is just about OK for voice at 8kbps (I tried it) but obviously Speex would be better.
If the i-River had this facility I'd buy definitely buy it.
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:1, Funny)
heheh. that's priceless. i agree with what you wrote though. insightful, but it'll probably get modded as flamebait by some mod that's never read a techical manual in his/her life.
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:1)
Perhaps they simply spend more time on the product than the manual? After all, most people buying a motherboard, for example, know what they are doing.
Hell, I have seen programmers write English rather poorly (hell, you occasionally find typos in the program's comments, or even the program itself) but the code otherwise is sound and clean. Haven't you? After al
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:3, Flamebait)
I'd recommend that you try the product before you bash it...basic logic dictates that you do this other wise you'd be committing a fallacy.
Your logic is flawed even if you have a Ph. D.
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:2, Informative)
I have no experience with the iRiver 180T, but I have a very hard time believing the earphones are the best in the market.
The etymotic earphones that I use [etymotic.com], which as far as I know are the best sounding earbud headphones in the world, cost (for the headphones alone) almost three times as much as the iRiver mp3 player. If iRiver can sell better headphones than the etymotics for 1/3 the price,
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:2)
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Assumption - This Product Line Sucks (Score:2)
did you hit it with your regular wheel, or one of your training wheels?
Your post makes you look like your about 5....with the mouth of a sailor.
Re:Screw ogg (Score:2, Informative)
Re:MP3 CD Players (Score:2)
Re:MP3 CD Players (Score:2)
Re:Fashion victims will still buy IPod. (Score:2)
Re:Fashion victims will still buy IPod. (Score:2)
Re:Sorry, but I think this is actually pretty cool (Score:2, Informative)
CD->OGG->MP3->OGG is probably not going to sound as good as the mp3s you currently have.