Diamond Rio Selling Well 54
Tramm Hudson writes
"In this Reuters article, Diamond Multimedia states that they are making 10,000 units a week and are still behind demand. Otherwise a fairly standard news report -- "Users love MP3, industry hates it". "
I've found that they skip terribly at 128kbits, but less then
that and they are tolerable. The first portable mp3 player
than can store 5+ hours of music at 128kbits and not skip
will do well. Until then, the Rio is a beta test for the
real revolution. When the real deal is here though, the Rio
will have made sure that we have lots of MP3s to choose from.
It skips? (Score:1)
Icon (Score:1)
Size vs. storage (Score:1)
Still, it's a thought.
Doesn't skip... (Score:1)
ibm microdrive (Score:1)
asinus sum et eo superbio
ibm microdrive (Score:1)
i would guess the power requirement for a full size drive would be a bit much for something like a portable mp3 player.
asinus sum et eo superbio
My Rio seems to handle ANY MP3 (Score:1)
Encoding things at 256 kbps seems like a waste to me. My ears cannot tell the difference between a 160-kbps MP3 and the original CD. Personally, I prefer to use 96 kbps with joint-stereo encoding; it sounds just fine in the kinds of environments a portable player is designed for (walking, driving, etc.).
Sony? Nope. Samsung? Yepp. :-) (Score:1)
Possible Solution (Score:1)
I have had problems with some MP3's under OS/2. There's a utility (for OS/2) called UNCOOK that fixed the problem. I suspect some incoding software puts bogus info in the MP3 file and UNCOOK takes it out.
I tracked down a few versions:
OS/2 [tudelft.nl]
Unix/Linux [free-music.com]
DOS [flash.net]
winblows [free-music.com]
A Disc/MP3Man would be nice.... (Score:1)
Too bad I'm all thumbs at hardware. At least we're getting there on the processor side. Remember the smallest webserver [stanford.edu] that was mentioned on slashdot [slashdot.org] last month?
MP4 is not the answer (Score:1)
If the industry wants to stop the "unauthorized" MP3 scene (as opposed to the mp3.com-style one) they could do so at a stroke by reducing the price of CDs to a dollar apiece. They would still make a fortune because people would buy massively more CDs than they do now, but no, there's no chance of that happening because they're basically dinosaurs with a peanut for a brain.
This is a free market in action, with new technology constantly changing the rules. If the industry doesn't want to compete with the new lost-cost possibilities brought about by technology then it deserves to die, and with it those musicians who insist on playing the old game at the old prices instead of adapting to the new environment.
That's not the only driving force of course, but it's a strong one.
Netwinder! (Score:1)
encoding (Score:1)
Not enough memory. (Score:1)
No skipping here. (Score:1)
The Rio DOES NOT SKIP (Score:1)
The Rio does not skip - please remove that comment from the front page.
Yours,
Kris.
MPman doesn't skip. (Score:1)
isn't as flashy in appearance as the Rio, it DID
cost me less and perform quite well.
I've also noticed that the MPman doesn't skip and
will handle MP3's up to 256kbps as opposed to
Rio's 128.
Just two cents.
- Wing
- Reap the fires of the soul.
- Harvest the passion of life.
Sold online at several places. (Score:1)
See:
www.mpman.com
Info on the MPman and product support.
www.shopper.com
Search for "mpman"
www.pricewatch.com
Search for "mpman"
www.eigerlabs.com
Info on the device and other misc.
http://www.eigerlabs.com/MPMan/partners.htm
Places to buy the MPman.
Hope that helps.
- Wing
- Reap the fires of the soul.
- Harvest the passion of life.
doesn't skip (Score:1)
It Ain't Skippin' Here (Score:1)
InitZero
Rio Firmware: Anyone looked at it? (Score:1)
Also, is it possible for two parallel port devices to speak directly to each other? I'd like to hack my Rio so it can send songs to other Rios with a suitable cord connecting them. If it's possible in the hardware, then it's possible in the firmware. That would be one cool hack.
Skin-ware? (Score:1)
Jason Dufair
"Those who know don't have the words to tell
aac? off-topic (Score:1)
My Rio doesn't skip, even at 160kb! (Score:1)
If you don't have a Rio and are just relaying rumors, stop relying on rumors and try one out! I use mine EVERY day and have never even had a spot that "slowed down" because it was too busy processing. The only time I've had it skip is when rip songs from scratched CD's and that isn't the Rio's fault.
The Rio RULES, don't let anyone B.S. you...
No, it does not skip. (Score:1)
Perhaps something was wrong with the mp3 or that particular unit.....
AFAIC, the only thing that beats the Rio is my MiniDisc portable recorder/player for expandability reasons. That being said, the Rio is a fine product which has the advantage of fast uploading of songs (Minidisc has to be recorded realtime) and the disadvantages of high media prices (flash memory), and inability to record on its own.
Overall, I almost regret purchasing the Rio due to the price and partly to the fact that I already have MiniDisc equipment.... but then I remember how often I must replace/recharge the batteries in my MD compared to the Rio...
I would like to hear more from anyone who has/had a Rio which skips on 128k songs....
Skip?? Try This. (Score:1)
I was using WinAmp to play the MP3Z from and they would skip and speed up without end.
Well, as a test, I tried to record some CDs I own from my HP 7110i CD-RW and low and behold, perfect!
WinAmp AND my RIO play them flawlessly at 128.
Hope this helps
-Howler
"HHHhhoowwwwllll Babe!"
Too expensive (Score:1)
A. It had more storage space
B. It was priced for what you actually get.
Still, it's good that diamond came out with this. It opens the market to other similar (i.e. better) items.
I have a Rio... (Score:1)
THe rio doesn't skip (Score:1)