Originally posted by: bigshooter
The newer ones even come with a cradle that you can copy music over at high speed with, plus you can use 4x (or maybe higher) compression. I haven't played with this, but it claims you can fit 320 minutes of music on a minidisc and transfer at up to 32x or 64x depending on the model. This means you could copy a 72 minute cd over in a little over a minute.
1) Any high speed copying quoted by Sony is only applicable if all your MP3's are converted to ATRAC format. If not, then the player has to convert tracks to ATRAC format, which is what all minidisc players record in. From what I've heard, transfer/record times are very slow if your music has to be converted to ATRAC first.
2) Sony says minidiscs play MP3's, etc., but what it should say is that it's software is capable of converting most formats into their proprietary format (ATRAC). So when you transfer songs to a minidisc, you're actually recording them to the disc in ATRAC format.
3) Sony's security methods are very restrictive. You have to check songs in and out of your music library and you can only check out 3 copies of a song at a time. Also, for some stupid reason, the new minidisc players (NetMD) no longer allow you to move or delete tracks from the disc through the player. Any editing of a disc must be done by the software on your computer. This essentially makes minidiscs nothing more than solid-state mp3 player memory cards, but they aren't solid state.
4) You can fit up to 320 minutes on one disc using the 4x compression mode, but from everything I've heard, any music recorded at this compression is horrible. However, the 2x compression sounds as good as MP3's, from my experience.
I really wanted a minidisc player when I was looking for a portable music player, but after reading all the cons of the NetMD minidisc recorders, I decided to go with an MP3 player. They are much easier to use, there are no security issues, and solid-state MP3 players never skip. I decided to go with the Ipod when I found it for a good deal and ended up trading up to the new model that came out this year. It's not solid-state, but the capacity more than makes up for it. Playlists can be generated on the fly now, and you can choose from every song in your music collection (size permitting), so you can listen to any song you want whenever you want. And the best part is you never have to change memory cards, discs, etc. For what it's worth, I strongly vote for an Ipod; you'll wonder how you lived without it once you have it.
More generally, though, I recommend an MP3 player over a Minidisc player.
tdawg