|
|
To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
|
Panasonic SV-SD80: Redefining tiny June 25, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/coolgear/audio/soa/Panasonic-SV-SD80-Redefining-tiny/0,139023372,120266178,00.htm
Panasonic already had the smallest MP3 player on the market. Now its flagship e.wear product is even smaller. Hold me closer, tiny dancer Our only concern with the SV-SD80 unit itself is in the build quality of the latch for SD cards. Cards are kept in place with a very thin piece of plastic. Given the SV-SD80's size, there's really no alternative, but a slightly too keen opening hand could easily snap this casing off. Panasonic's managed to get all the functionality of a full MP3 player into just five controls; two volume buttons, two skip track buttons and a combined start/stop button. The way it does this is by having a modification switch at the side that also acts as a hold switch. In normal position, the buttons perform their named function, but in option position, they control bass level, track repetition and playlists -- although playlists aren't actually supported in the current firmware. It's a novel approach, and again somewhat necessary to make the player this small. It does, however, make some changes quite fiddly. We were also somewhat annoyed to discover that while the SV-SD80 has both repeat and random play functions, you can't set both simultaneously for a never-ending random song loop. While most MP3 players come with a USB cable, generally accompanied by a proprietary but guaranteed to break connector, Panasonic's taken a different route with the SV-SD80. It comes with an independent USB SD card reader. It's a nice addition; if you have other SD/MMC card devices such as digital cameras, Windows should be able to recognise them as individual drives. A power charging unit is also supplied; without direct USB connectivity there's no other way to power the unit. I've got the power The SV-SD80 ships with a 64MB SD card, which is enough for around 60 odd minutes of reasonable quality audio, and a lot more if you're not terribly particular about sound quality. Song transfer is performed through RealJukebox, which is needed for the SD encoding needed to get the SV-SD80 to recognise MP3 or WMA files. Most security encoding features suck; they often crash and involve long overheads to the transfer rate. Panasonic seem to understand this; transfers to the SV-SD80 were essentially transparent. If SDMI is ever to take off, it's with simple operation like this. Totally addicted to bass
Panasonic e.wear SV-SD80
Copyright © 2009 CBS Interactive, a CBS Company. All Rights Reserved. |