Originally posted by: Gurck
You actually believe this FUD?Originally posted by: sniperruff
the ipod is built pretty well and won't physically fall apart... the same can't be said for some creative and rio players (even if they are cheaper).![]()
Originally posted by: Gurck
TextOriginally posted by: railer
the iRiver photo 40 gig was $400
quite obviously, a moron![]()
Originally posted by: sniperruff
Originally posted by: Gurck
You actually believe this FUD?Originally posted by: sniperruff
the ipod is built pretty well and won't physically fall apart... the same can't be said for some creative and rio players (even if they are cheaper).![]()
but it's true. the ipod just feel more solid, but rio's players don't feel quite sturdy. creative have yet to come up with a reasonable 20gig mp3 player but its flash-based players aren't that rugged either.
oh well HD-based mp3 players are never meant to be thrown around anyway =)
Originally posted by: jonnyGURU
Originally posted by: Mo0o
... too bad i alreayd voted for iriver
And then there's the initial cost of the iPod. Sure it's 20GB, but I don't plan on carrying ALL of my MP3's with me at all times. I can fit six entire albums at 192Kbps in 1MB. That's good enough and at half the price, makes for a decent value.
Oh, it feels more solid! Of courseOriginally posted by: sniperruff
but it's true. the ipod just feel more solid, but rio's players don't feel quite sturdy. creative have yet to come up with a reasonable 20gig mp3 player but its flash-based players aren't that rugged either.Originally posted by: Gurck
You actually believe this FUD?Originally posted by: sniperruff
the ipod is built pretty well and won't physically fall apart... the same can't be said for some creative and rio players (even if they are cheaper).![]()
oh well HD-based mp3 players are never meant to be thrown around anyway =)
Originally posted by: Philippine Mango
Originally posted by: jonnyGURU
Originally posted by: Mo0o
... too bad i alreayd voted for iriver
And then there's the initial cost of the iPod. Sure it's 20GB, but I don't plan on carrying ALL of my MP3's with me at all times. I can fit six entire albums at 192Kbps in 1MB. That's good enough and at half the price, makes for a decent value.
(bold) um how were you able to achieve this? What kind of codec are you using?
Originally posted by: Gurck
Oh, it feels more solid! Of courseOriginally posted by: sniperruff
but it's true. the ipod just feel more solid, but rio's players don't feel quite sturdy. creative have yet to come up with a reasonable 20gig mp3 player but its flash-based players aren't that rugged either.Originally posted by: Gurck
You actually believe this FUD?Originally posted by: sniperruff
the ipod is built pretty well and won't physically fall apart... the same can't be said for some creative and rio players (even if they are cheaper).![]()
oh well HD-based mp3 players are never meant to be thrown around anyway =)Ok, I say it doesn't. There, we're even. Got anything else?
![]()
Originally posted by: scorpmatt
Originally posted by: Pabster
Gotta go with the iPod.
Once you use it you'll never want any "other" player.
LOL!!!! oh man, thanks I needed that laugh tonight!
oh wait..... you are being serious aren't you?
Originally posted by: Last Rezort
Originally posted by: aux
iriver for the sound quality, that's all I care about
Another myth.
As a sound engineer i know a little about sound, and the only thing that makes a diffrence is how you encode the sound when recording it. Sorry, your wrong.
EDIT: Btw, unless you have an ear for it, and around 90% of humans dont, Beyond 126bit encoding is not needed. THough yes there will be a cleaner sound above that, you then must take into account that it takes a good ammount more memory to store.
Originally posted by: Last Rezort
Originally posted by: aux
iriver for the sound quality, that's all I care about
Another myth.
As a sound engineer i know a little about sound, and the only thing that makes a diffrence is how you encode the sound when recording it. Sorry, your wrong.
EDIT: Btw, unless you have an ear for it, and around 90% of humans dont, Beyond 126bit encoding is not needed. THough yes there will be a cleaner sound above that, you then must take into account that it takes a good ammount more memory to store.
Originally posted by: Last Rezort
Originally posted by: aux
iriver for the sound quality, that's all I care about
Another myth.
As a sound engineer i know a little about sound, and the only thing that makes a diffrence is how you encode the sound when recording it. Sorry, your wrong.
EDIT: Btw, unless you have an ear for it, and around 90% of humans dont, Beyond 126bit encoding is not needed. THough yes there will be a cleaner sound above that, you then must take into account that it takes a good ammount more memory to store.
Originally posted by: Last Rezort
Hmmmmmmmm.
read the whole post, i said it gets cleaner, but thats about it.
Its called virtual sound at that point, and no I listen to my Ipod on These.
Yes i use diffrent headphones at work, but for pleasure thats what i use.
I encode at 126 because its smaller, and IMO, Not Needed.
BTW, i dont listen to my ipod at home. my computer is set up directly to the sound system.
I know what you mean, but as a portable audio device, most headphones dont even register the change.
Originally posted by: Philippine Mango
Originally posted by: Last Rezort
Originally posted by: aux
iriver for the sound quality, that's all I care about
Another myth.
As a sound engineer i know a little about sound, and the only thing that makes a diffrence is how you encode the sound when recording it. Sorry, your wrong.
EDIT: Btw, unless you have an ear for it, and around 90% of humans dont, Beyond 126bit encoding is not needed. THough yes there will be a cleaner sound above that, you then must take into account that it takes a good ammount more memory to store.
Your so full of sh!t that I can see it all over this post.. You clearly are not a sound engineer and if you are, you probably are a poor one at that. Your clearly not an audiophile, I can tell you for a fact there is an absolute difference between 128Kb/s encoding and 320. Wanna know how? Try to hook up your computer to a REAL sound system (not your sh!tty bose...), play the 128Kb/s MP3 on it and turn up the volume+bass (bass at reasonable levels so it doesn't obviously distort the sound). Then do the same with a 320Kb/s mp3 and tell me you can't tell the difference.
Originally posted by: Ornery
WTF is Samsung? Seems like the best bang for the buck to me.