Have a picture of Akai 256MB SD MP3 Player?, please send it to us.
Picture courtesy of Mike Deruki.
| Sound Quality | 3.5/10 |
|---|---|
| Battery Life | 3/10 |
| Features | 1/10 |
| Value for Money | 4.5/10 |
| Overall rating | 3.5/10 |
By swatkiss
on 21st Jul 2006
| Time MP3 Player Owned | 1 - 6 Months |
|---|---|
| Sound Quality | 5/10 |
| Battery Life | 5/10 |
| Features | 2/10 |
| Memory | 255MB |
| Value for money | 8/10 |
| Overall value | 7/10 |
| | |
Cheap
Easy to add songs
Upgradeable using SD cards
Very limited navigation
No playlists, you have to start from the first track after powering it on
Limited Software
Sound quality is not great
The player looks good, it is white with Red markings although it feels a bit cheap. It comes with white headphones and a white USB lead. There is no charger as this runs off a standard AAA battery. It is about the same size as a modern iPod, maybe a little smaller. It's very light.
It comes with 256MB built in memory, but the real advantage of this is the ability to plug in SD cards. Using an appropriate sized SD card you could store up to a few hundred songs.
Although the player is branded as Akai (including the power on logo), it came with software branded SigmaTel. This includes a firmware updater which appeared to install the same version but changed the power on logo to be Allstar.
The display has 4 lines
1. track length, time into track, current track number and total tracks
2. Song Title
3. Artist Name
4. Volume, whether the track is from internal memory or card and battery status.
This covers everything you need to know about the current song. It has a blue back-light which makes it easy to see.
There are only four buttons on the player. One that functions as play, pause and power; one that goes into the menu to allow you to configure the player, and the remaining two for track selection and volume control (by holding the button down). This is all easy to use, but does have one downside in that if you power off you go back to the first track. It doesn't have any way of remembering what track you are on. Also you cannot search through based on artist, or any other parameter you can just skip through the tracks sequentially. This is OK if you have a number of small SD cards, but makes it impractical for putting in really large SD cards, as you would never reach beyond the first few tracks.
The sound quality is OK, although not great.
The player can be viewed in windows explorer and files can be copied onto either the internal memory or the SD card (show as separate drives). The SD card can also have music copied to it using a SD card reader/writer. I was unable to get the internal drive to mount under Linux (although I didn't try to investigate as I am happy just using the SD cards). I could transfer tracks to the SD card using my SD reader/writing under Linux and so it can be used with Linux.
All in all this is quite adequate at what it does. It is a bit basic, but the price more than reflects it, it is very cheap when you consider you can easily extend it by putting in a cheap readily available SD card. If you want a cheap MP3 player and can put up with the basic navigation then it's worth buying, you'd be looking at paying a lot more to get something that will hold more tracks.

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