gosh, I'm so on top of this.
For christmas I told everybody I knew that I wanted a MP3 player for christmas. I got it. hell yes.
It is a Riovolt SP150.
http://www.sonicblue.com/audio/rio/portables.asp Statistics:
* Plays MP3 & WMA CDs, CD-R, CD-RW and standard music CDs
* 16-minute SteadyPlay skip protection
* Up to 20 hours of playtime on two AA batteries
* Easy navigation on lighted 3-line text display
* View artist and album information using ID3 music tags
* Listen to set playlists or create custom mixes
* Maximize MP3 audio quality with dynamic sound controls
* Repeat and shuffle play modes
When I got this baby, I immediately pulled up nero and burned myself an ISO with the following specifications:
ISO Level 2 (Max of 31 characters)
MODE 2/XA
Ascii Character Set
Joliet turned off
I did not relax any ISO restrictions:
Allow pathdepth more than 8 directories
Allow more than 255 characters in a path
Do not add ';1' ISO file version extension
I organized my music like so:
[ROOT]
[DIRECTORY Artist1]
[DIRECTORY Album1]
MP3 Song Title's
[DIRECTORY Album2]
MP3 Song Title's
[DIRECTORY Artist2]
[DIRECTORY Album1]
MP3 Song Titles
[DIRECTORY Artist3]
[DIRECTORY album1]
MP3 Song Titles
[DIRECTORY album2]
MP3 Song Titles
[DIRECTORY album3]
MP3 Song Titles
Since I was burning full albums, that directory structure is the most convenient for me.
On the first CD I burned 167 songs on 13 albums. The MP3 player gave me those statistics.
Navigation through the directory structure was surprising painless. You push a button to start browsing the CD. It has a 3 tall list view displaying directories within brackets []. They all aligned to the left, and if you paused at a directory/mp3 title that was too long for the panel, it will start scrolling it so that you may read the rest of the title. The play/stop/previous/next buttons doubled here as navigation controls. Up and down to view the current directory contents. left to move up a directory. right to browse a sub directory you have currently selected. So when I finish listening to an album on the player, I immediately and conveniently browse to the artist->album I would like to listen to next.
A comment on that skip protection. While listening to the MP3's, the CD would actually stop spinning. I believe that not only does it cache the currently playing file, but the projected next file as well. Seeing how the CD stops spinning is a visual proof that there's no way in heck you're gonna bump it and make it skip. Also it saves on battery power.
I had one minor complaint with my first burned CD however. It sorted the contents of directories alphabetically - not in the order it was burned. So I was not able to listen to the songs on the album I burned consecutively. This was very annoying since I had burned several continuous mix albums. However, the second CD I burned (172 songs 15 albums) I changed my file names to a format similar to the below:
01 - TITLE1
02 - TITLE2
Now the songs are in order, and played in order. Course, that means I have 5 characters less to use for filenames (31 max). You may choose to leave out a dash and a space. However this is not a problem since you can't see the entire 31 characters within the display without letting the player scroll it. This is rarely necessary.
On to ID3 tag reading. While playing the song, it will display these statistics in a display similar to the following.
023 04:30
Artist - Album
Title
If the lines are too long for the display, they'll continously scroll. Otherwise, it won't. I had made sure that every single one of my MP3's had correct ID3v1.1 tag information. I don't know if it reads ID3v2 tag info, but all the ID3v1 info I had was displayed.
Lastly, I enjoyed playing with the equalizer. You can switch between several different preset's including Rock and Classical and Bass or whatever. There was also a User, but I don't know how - if possible - I could customize the user preset. I have no yet explored all that this baby can do.
One complaint on the presets though. And this is a bigger complaint than that could-be-useful alphabetizing of tracks. On several presets, the volume was fairly weak. I'd pump the volume to the max and it still wasn't loud enough for me. But no matter what the preset/song was, I was always hovering between 37 to 40 (the max). I think this thing could stand a bit more juice in that area. But maybe you all aren't as deaf as I am.
Another complaint. If you have both sub directories and MP3's/WMA's within a directory. they're ALL alphabetized interweaved. This is messy and inconvenient. It would be better for all directories to be listed at the top.
All told, this is the best most useful present I've recieved for a long time. If I knew how much this rocked, I would've bought one myself a long time ago.