iRiver to Build In-Dash Digital HD Players 216
An anonymous reader writes "It looks like iRiver is going to take over where the Rio Car left off. Their CEO announced today that they are near completion on a new plant in China that will produce HD-based in-dash digital music players for automobiles. The new plant can push out 700K units a month. With the iPod dominating the digital portable market, iRiver sees this as a wide-open area they can move into. According to MacWorld iRiver is the third leading seller of MP3 portables with 5.6% of the market, following the number two seller Rio which holds 6.4% of the market. And the Apple iPod? No surprise, only a whopping 65.8% of all units shipped. 92% if you only count HD portables."
Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:3, Informative)
Apple's global marketshare in the digital audio player market is about 20%.
Re:Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:2, Informative)
"The company said it held a 10 percent share of the global market for MP3 players in the June quarter, coming second after Apple's 17 percent share."
Re:Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:2, Interesting)
- 40% of tracked retail Mp3 player sales in Europe/ America/ Japan, though figures elsewhere are lower
- Over 10% of MP3 decoder chips made are used for manufacture of iPods
Those sales figures are still a bit misleading- they reflect Apple's performance against flash players, which they do not make.
Even if recent news reports are correct and those figures are high, Apple still remains overwhelmingly dominant
Re:Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:2)
No, your quotes are misleading.. The figures are based on portable compressed music players which the iPod is one of many.
Why is the subset of HD based player even need to be considered seperately? I mean, it is a portable music player just like the others. You could break it down further and claim the iPod is has 99.9% of the HD based players that are white. Does that reall
78.5% of all statistics are made up on the spot... (Score:2, Funny)
78.5% of all statistics are made up on the spot...
Re:Misleading marketshare numbers (Score:3, Interesting)
Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said today that based on a survey of 600 teenagers, Apple's iPod is dominating "mindshare and market share." Munster said in a research note that of all the high school students surveyed, 16 percent currently own an iPod and 24 percent plan to buy an iPod within the next year. Munster also noted that the iPod ranked fourth on the teens' holiday wish list--behind clothes, money, and a car--even though
open markets (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:open markets (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:open markets (Score:2)
OK, then lets define the superior quality thing here and see how wide open the market becomes.
A HD based player that has 1) Wireless and wired connectivity (don't care, ethernet, usb, firewire) 2) Upgradeable/hackable firmware 3) ogg/wma/flac/ normal formats 4) RCA and optical lines out/in 5) gapless/crossfaded playback 6) random playback by folder/album 7) less than $500.
1st one that does this gets my money.
Oh, and the
Re:open markets (Score:2)
Ahh, I thought it was the price/performance thing that I mentioned. I can afford a Mercedes or a Lexus as I would guess that 1/2 of the US population could do as well*, but I drive a 13 year old SUV because it works and its paid for.
* I would have to seriously adjust other expenses to make this happen as would most people. But I'd rather pay for an appreciating piece of property vs a depreciating t
Re:open markets (Score:2)
Re:open markets (Score:2)
No wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
60 GBytes not enough for you? Gapless playback not good enough? 4V pre-outs useless? 4x5 or 2x10 fully parametric EQ too shabby?
It was done 'properly' years ago.
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Rio Car was amazing in its day.. (Score:2)
I mean can YOU telnet into your stereo system? Seriously though, I look forward to see what new things they come out with as it is sorta hard to explain to passengers that no, they can't buy one of these anymore.
Re:Rio Car was amazing in its day.. (Score:2)
Re:Rio Car was amazing in its day.. (Score:2)
4V line outs for better SQ.
Fully parametric EQ for better SQ.
Credit card remote so your passengers can search for music.
Incredible player software with a UI designed for car use.
Well integrated into the car's power scheme. Constant 12V, switched 12V and illumination sense are all handled intelligently, out of the box.
Cool visuals.
And yes, we've hacked in GPS too. Admittedly, with a 32x128 2-bit color screen and t
Re:Rio Car was amazing in its day.. (Score:2)
The empeg has special kernel hooks, and power controls to handle dips in car power. Car voltages fluctuate wildly while starting. The empeg also stores state in a small flash area which is controled by a kernel module to make sure the thing can start where it left off on next boot.
I'd like to see you stuff a mini-itx board, power supply, laptop drive, shock mounting, and display in a single din das
Re:Rio Car was amazing in its day.. (Score:2)
Also, the SB live does not support hi-voltage preouts, or proper floating ground. car audio setups require 4v preamped lines to amplifiers, and proper grounding otherwise you're going to hear nothing but electrical noise from the engine.
Cool, but (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cool, but (Score:2, Funny)
iriver mini? (Score:5, Interesting)
DAMN! (Score:5, Insightful)
Reminds me of the old adage: "Second place is the first loser"
I always thought that was a rather annoying way to look at it. In this case I think it applies. 65.8 : 6.4 is just over a factor of ten. Damn Apple really does dominate that market. Hopefully this works out for iRiver. Otherwise there probably not going to last long. They're getting creamed (at 5.6%).
Though I suppose one can say by the same logic Apple is getting creamed in the computer market. Though I wonder how their numbers compare to other vendors (ei Dell, HP, Toshiba, Sony, etc) as opposed to apple vs. the entire PC market.
Re:DAMN! (Score:2)
Interestingly, those numbers would indicate that HD based players dominate in America (dividing gives 70%) while I am quite convinced that both in volume and value flash based players dominate completely here. iPod's are still relatively rare, but a small flash player on a necklace has become the latest necessary fashion accessory.
Correction (Score:4, Interesting)
Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:5, Insightful)
Why the heck is it taking the auto industry so long to add simple network connectivity to cars? I know it's a price sensitive market, and potentially a security problem, but I've been anticipating this "no brainer" option for years....where is it???
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:2)
A friend of mine has the older Rio car unit, and he loves it. But I wasn't so sure about getting one (and they went off the market). I ended up waiting a year or so to see how the MP3/CD players would fare. There were only a couple models out at the time, but now there are tons. I picked up a Blaupu
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:2)
I have a JVC MP3/CD player that I put in my car back in 2001. Probably the best investment I've ever made with regards to enjoyment value (worked perfectly on my two-week road trip). Easy to change CDs if you want different music and each CD holds 6-10 hours worth. I probably carry 400 hours worth of music in the car (10 CDs up on the visor, another 40 in a pair of thin nyoprolene(?) CD cases).
DVD-R would be very nice, then I could have a real 1980s disc rather then
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:2)
But why do you want an extra player in the car, anyway? I want to have one mobile player, which I can use at home, in the subway, when walking... and when I drive in my car I want to connect to my car stereo and have access to all the music and all the playlists I can listen to in other situations. Of c
OmniFi: The solution (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:2)
I think there's a larger group of people who don't mind this. Including those who don't have a home wireless network, or can't get their car close enough (live in a large apartment complex) for a good signal, or simply those who're already comfortable with plugging the player into the computer to upload songs: iPod owners.
I've always thought the ideal car player would accept an iPod. Yeah, I've seen the connectors you can buy. That'
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:4, Informative)
As regards security I can't see how it would be any more or less secure than any other wireless network and if it is only offering the opportunity to add new music or delete the existing music then in a worst case scenario all you'd have to do is park your car and download all your songs again.
This would be such an obvious and useful piece of functionality it's really annoying it's not available yet.
Re:Networking - The Missing Piece (Score:2)
What do you mean?
I know it's a price sensitive market, and potentially a security problem,
This didn't stop Microsoft from selling Windows... (ducks)
ipod in car (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I don't want a device just for my car. I want one I can have in my car, home and anywhere else I go.
Re:ipod in car (Score:2, Interesting)
Well... (Score:2)
HD Based Car Players (Score:5, Interesting)
The car version, a 20GB hard drive that I had professionally installed under my rear passenger seat, lasted a week. Made by Rockford-Fosgate, in a large case to support the hard drive, you would think it could take the bumps and shocks of the road. It couldn't.
It would skip when I would hit a bump, even at 15 miles per hour pulling into the gas station. At the point it would skip, it would lock up for 30 seconds, then resume, but every 30 seconds would pause for another 30 seconds. Ejecting the hard drive and putting it back in would reset it to the point of the bump, then it would play fine until I hit another bump.
The pro's of the unit were you could plug a USB 802.11b card into the casing, and automatically transfer your music wirelessly right into your garage. If you didn't have a wireless network, you could eject the hard drive and it had a USB port to hook up to your PC. It had a really slick interface in the car, and setting up a wireless network over the in-dash spin dial thing was a breeze, they did a a really good job with that, with the different ways you could input your WEP key.
The cons were the bumping of the car made it pause, the USB wireless network adapter just kind of hung out in your car, no where to mount it. And the software interface on a Windows pc (SimpleCenter) was one of the most horrid music applications I have ever used. And it didn't do Ogg.
I'm skeptical of any hard drive based car player until they can more than account for the shocks and bumps, and it needs to come with some kind of warranty plan. How long will those hard drives last?
Re:HD Based Car Players (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder what kind of hd was used in those units? I have a roll-your-own mini-itx setup in my trunk. The OS drive is a 1Gb CompactFlash card and the media drive is a 30Gb Hitachi 2.5" laptop HD. To date (just over a year) I have not had any problems with the HD skipping or crashing. I drive a Prelude that is regularly abused by numerous potholes and the laptop HD has taken the beatings well. I have experienced problems with the touchscreen in the dash due to summer heat, but no issues with the HD.
If your
Re:HD Based Car Players (Score:2)
Re:HD Based Car Players (Score:2)
Re:HD Based Car Players (Score:2)
What concerns me much more, is this idea of connecting up an 802.11 card to the car. How long will it be till my car alarm gets a virus, making it scream "H4VE Y0U TR1ED HERBAL V1AGRA? FREE 5AMPLE!" to pedestrians.
Re:HD Based Car Players (Score:2)
The heat is the other and stuff in a car dash can get very hot and well above the storage temps for hard drives. When you turn on the car and force the A/C way up, it may cool some parts inside the dash or it might not cool anything.
In winter you could have a problem at the other end of the temp scale.
And don't forget electrical shock too. Cars can create huge charges with the newer tire compounds and it only takes one zap to kill the entire computer.
There seems to be a reaso
I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:5, Interesting)
But the thing that closed the deal for me? USB hosting. I no longer have to lug my laptop around on holiday because I can plug my camera into the iRiver and store the files on it's internal HD. All the colour screen, upgradable firmware, internal mic, radio, remote control, not needing custom software by appearing as just another drive, etc. is just icing on the cake.
Re:I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:2)
The U
Re:I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:2)
Re:I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:2)
Re:I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:2)
Re:I can't understand why they don't sell more.. (Score:3, Informative)
Once your device is connected, you go to a different menu on the iRiver that looks like a primative explorer, and use it to transfer files between the two devices. It's a bit clunky but as something that's not it's primary function, it works quite well.
Interface (Score:3, Insightful)
Obvious call for Wifi (Score:3, Interesting)
A car media player with a Wifi link would be ideal as the owner could then download tracks to it without the need either to walk a laptop out to the car or the car stereo back to the house.
the benefits of being able to browse people's music collections while driving would be entirely incidental
Input jack (Score:5, Insightful)
Can someone please make a car with a stereo that has an audio input? Does such a thing exist even in aftermarket? Assuming I already have a portable music player, I could just plug it in to my car stereo. Instead, I'm stuck using some pathetic mini FM transmitter, or cassette adapter if I have a cassette deck, or buying a whole new HD car stereo.
*sigh*
Re:Input jack (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree with you on the FM transmitter and cassette adapter - they bite rocks and suck. The FM units are usually NOT crystal or synthesized and drift all over the place, as well as the built-in limitation of 15kHz due to the way stereo multiplex works, and the cassette adapters have neither good base nor good treble response. I could not believe the difference when I got the CDDJ box installed.
Personally, I'd like to see the high-end car stereo manufactures put in a 3.5mm aux jack on the front, a pair of RCA's on the back, and a Bluetooth receiver - but that is about as likely as seeing a good candidate for president. I've got the hot tea, anybody have an atomic vector plotter?
Re:Input jack (Score:2)
I'm giving you only one example, as that's the one I have in my car. It plays MP3s out of CD-R/RWs and it has an analog audio input for the iPods and alikes.
I got mine a couple of years ago, for less than the suggested $250, and it's still going strong, no reason to change it.
Re:Input jack (Score:2)
Re:Input jack (Score:2)
I've had a bunch of aftermarket head units that have auxilary audio inputs. I'd actually be really surprised if you spent over 200 bucks on a head unit and DIDN'T have an aux input or even two. Usually the wires are in the BACK, so you'd have to run them to a jack out front for the use you're looking for, but real estate on the front of the unit is pretty tight, so it's probably going to be your only option for a while.
Re:Input jack (Score:3, Interesting)
I found this site yesterday because I'm in this market. I want to build a small ITX carputer and hopefully mount it in my new '04 Civic HX so that the car still looks stock. It'll have 802.11x and a removable HD, and I'd LIKE to tie it into the stock head unit so that I can change songs using the regula
Re:Input jack (Score:2)
Many do. Most stereos I have seen have some sorta odd connector on the back. This is often poorly documented, or if it's documented it's labled as a "cd-changer" or "equaliser" connector. My stereo for example takes a 13pin din connector, and I can easily spend $20 for it to line outs, or order the plug from digikey for a good deal less.
I got one better: USB input (Score:2)
They're so damned ubiquitous nowadays -- just a single USB port to plug in media -- a card reader (for CompactFlash cards), a jump drive, etc. Let the end-user deal with buying the storage, I just want a unit that PLAYS what I put into it.
Is this REALLY TO MUCH TO ASK FOR??
I've seen a grand total of ONE manufacturer that has a unit with a USB input, and it goes for over $3000. And there's no internal a
Good for low-end (Score:2, Insightful)
The large HD device is commendable for portability, but I would also like to see cars retain at least a CD-player. It is also time to get the better-than-CD audio formats into mass-production and use. A DVD-Audio/MP3/Sat/Radio auto system would be ideal.
iRiver as a whole (Score:2)
And their support department's sucky-ness rivals LinkSys.
Pioneer has one... (Score:2, Informative)
Can't Wait! Ran out of Empeg/Rio Cars (Score:2)
Why doesn't apple do this? (Score:2, Insightful)
changer (Score:2)
-bZj
empeg (Score:2)
I worry abo
HD in my car? (Score:2)
All I need is a USB port with a Mass Storage DAP (Score:2)
The catch is that the 65+% iPod isn't mass-storage compliant, and their wire remote protocol is proprietary.
It shouldn't cost much: if I can have a DVD player that sits on my home ethernet and reads anything uPNP, plays DVDs in progressive scan, has full
Re:What about patents and stuff... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What about patents and stuff... (Score:2)
Huh ? (Score:2)
Re:In-Dash? (Score:2)
Re:In-Dash? (Score:3, Funny)
Can't you just imagine it....
some idiot set of spotty 17 year olds parked on the corner of your street in their Civic, complete with spoilers which are half the size of the car, blacked out windows, neon lights flashing under the body and the rear seats replaced with bass speakers.
Up goes Netstumbler, or whatever and lo there's a connection there, "riceboy". You connect with the well documented passwords and there's the hard drive, full of ghetto rap.
Hmm, so if I drag and drop t
Re:In-Dash? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In-Dash? (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope someday they will get WiFi. That would be ideal. Park the car, open a port with a password, surf to it with either a laptop or home network, start transfer... I'd also prefer it to be trunk mount so the in-dash DVD/NAV doesn't have to come out.
Re:In-Dash? (Score:2)
I'd love to have wifi though...pull in the driveway and have musical updates pushed to the car. http://www.ssiamerica.com/ [ssiamerica.com]
Re:In-Dash? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:In Soviet Russia.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:In Soviet Russia.... (Score:2)
Re:the problem is (Score:5, Insightful)
Wiring up a car stereo is easy. It's no different than pluging in the speakers of a house stereo. Removing the trim to hide wires is the hardest part but even 'shop monkeys' can do this easily enough.
Are you also saying that my Alpine is worse than the piece of crap that came with my Honda? I don't think so.
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
Still, most people leave their factory decks in, except in older cards. Why do you think that is? Is it possible that I have a point?
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
Still, most people leave their factory decks in, except in older cards. Why do you think that is?
Once you figure that out, it will become clearer to you why expensive hard disk decks have not sold well.
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
Another good reason is you *might* be able to choose what you like. I'm not going to get into this whole better/worse thing. In my experence factory decks are pretty good. I know I installed a Honda deck in my old toyota before I gave it to my niece. It sounded like my Alpine actually.
There are thos
Generation gap (Score:2)
My parents, on the other hand, seem to be fine with stock: even a stock tapedeck. I think it has a lot to do with what media you carry - if your old CD's are fine in the stock deck then leave it be. If you've got a lot of tapes then leave it be.
For myself, I travel a lot and love music. It's a pain swapping CD's so when mp3-CD players came out I shelled out for a dec
You gotta' be kiddnig me (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You gotta' be kiddnig me (Score:2)
No, I don't think I'm out of touch. In fact I've done a couple dozen custom installs myself - amps, custom sub boxes, power cabling, the whole nine yards.
The best example (of many) that comes to mind is the factory Mercedes deck vs a
Re:You gotta' be kiddnig me (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:what are you doing on /.? (Score:2)
Oh come off it dude. I've put in plenty of car stereos, and I design audio products for a living. I know how easy it is to swap a deck.
Re:the problem is (Score:2)
I wonder what billionares are funding all the car audio shops in the country that are doing record business in the past 5 years.
Also, you either know absolutely nothing about car audio or are making your decisions on the junk you see at best buy, but my Kenwood aftermarket stereo kicks the living crap out of anything that comes stock in any car in quality and capabilities. and it cost LESS than the regular CD option from the factory. I have a tuner that will pull in FM and AM stations clearly whe
Not a bad idea! (Score:2)
Re:usual double standard. (Score:2)
Re:usual double standard. (Score:3, Insightful)
Monopoly:A business that is the sole supplier of a particular good or service. Regulated monopolies, such as electric utilities, are generally restricted as to the returns they are permitted to earn. Other monopolies such as firms with unique products or services derived from patents, copyrights, or geographic location may be able to earn very high returns.
Re:Instead of HD players (Score:2)