Saturday, July 14, 2007

5 Things To Look For When Choosing A MP3 Player

You can't go anywhere these days without seeing this small, digital device attached to cars, hips and clipped to belts and purses, MP3 players are everywhere. Small and portable, the options for styles, shapes, and features is as endless as the places they can be found. So, how do you find the right Mp3 player to meet your particular needs, provided you know what those needs are. Most people want the best mp3 player for the money. Here is a handy, useful guide to help decide which is the best mp3 player for you.

Mp3 players usually come in two categories, these are Flash and hard drive. Flash MP3 players are smaller, usually cheaper and aren't memory intensive. However, they more than make up for it by being a bit more durable. These mp3 players are usually better suited for active, on the go lifestyles and smaller budgets. The best feature is that they are upgradeable, allowing the MP3 player to grow with your needs. Hard drive mp3 players are usually larger, aren't as durable and more expensive. They do have the advantage of being able to hold large amounts of music and even video.

You can't go anywhere these days without seeing this small, digital device attached to cars, hips and clipped to belts and purses, MP3 players are everywhere. Small and portable, the options for styles, shapes, and features is as endless as the places they can be found. So, how do you find the right Mp3 player to meet your particular needs, provided you know what those needs are. Most people want the best mp3 player for the money. Here is a handy, useful guide to help decide which is the best mp3 player for you.

Mp3 players usually come in two categories, these are Flash and hard drive. Flash MP3 players are smaller, usually cheaper and aren't memory intensive. However, they more than make up for it by being a bit more durable. These mp3 players are usually better suited for active, on the go lifestyles and smaller budgets. The best feature is that they are upgradeable, allowing the MP3 player to grow with your needs. Hard drive mp3 players are usually larger, aren't as durable and more expensive. They do have the advantage of being able to hold large amounts of music and even video.

Features

Take a look around. Mp3 players have tons of features, sound and audio options, play options, even software for downloading, and organizing your music files. Mp3 players can literally be entire music libraries in the palm of your hand. When checking out Mp3 players, make sure to check out things like battery life, and any accessories you may want. Sometimes, more expensive doesn't necessarily mean better when looking for the best mp3 player for you. A little research can go a long way.

Display

Have you ever had this happen? I'm sure you have. It happens with cell phones all the time. You can't read your display or have to squint to make it out. Frustrating. Make sure your display is readable and large enough to show you all the information you want to see. Mp3 players are electronic investments. You want to make sure you're going to want to use the mp3 after you get it.

Price

On a tight budget? looking to spend less than $100 dollars? Flash Mp3 players are the way to go. Hard drive Mp3 players rarely go for less than between $150 and $200 because of larger displays, more memory and a greater number of features. If a hard drive mp3 player is what you want but your budget's still tight, check out discount stores and auction sites. Often times, older models are sold at significant discounts.

Brands

Just about any electronics company makes mp3 players - Apple, Creative Labs, Sandisk and Rio to name a few. If you like sticking to brands you trust, you're sure to find an MP3 player in your brand.

Finding the best mp3 player for you can be confusing with all the available options. Take the time to look into your options before deciding.

Take a look around. Mp3 players have tons of features, sound and audio options, play options, even software for downloading, and organizing your music files. Mp3 players can literally be entire music libraries in the palm of your hand. When checking out Mp3 players, make sure to check out things like battery life, and any accessories you may want. Sometimes, more expensive doesn't necessarily mean better when looking for the best mp3 player for you. A little research can go a long way.

Display

Have you ever had this happen? I'm sure you have. It happens with cell phones all the time. You can't read your display or have to squint to make it out. Frustrating. Make sure your display is readable and large enough to show you all the information you want to see. Mp3 players are electronic investments. You want to make sure you're going to want to use the mp3 after you get it.

Price

On a tight budget? looking to spend less than $100 dollars? Flash Mp3 players are the way to go. Hard drive Mp3 players rarely go for less than between $150 and $200 because of larger displays, more memory and a greater number of features. If a hard drive mp3 player is what you want but your budget's still tight, check out discount stores and auction sites. Often times, older models are sold at significant discounts.

Brands

Just about any electronics company makes mp3 players - Apple, Creative Labs, Sandisk and Rio to name a few. If you like sticking to brands you trust, you're sure to find an MP3 player in your brand.

Finding the best mp3 player for you can be confusing with all the available options. Take the time to look into your options before deciding.


http://www.rightbiz.com/Article/5-Things-To-Look-For-When-Choosing-A-MP3-Player/11708

A Humorous Look At The Latest TV Technology

In the ongoing trend towards miniaturization that will undoubtedly end with television screens implanted into the corneas of every human being at birth, the great Japanese gods of technology have been developing portable video players so that mortal men may take the television that was too inconvenient to watch last night wherever they go and watch it at a time that is merely inconvenient for everybody else.

Downloading video content from the internet, or streaming, has become increasingly popular. Your favorite shows can be stored on portable media devices and viewed at your leisure, and the more popular services allow you to plan your viewing with the aid of online schedules and reminders months or years in advance.

The latest in TV technology is to stream live television content directly to your mobile phone, allowing the user to watch the programs that he missed anywhere and at any time of his choosing. Unfailingly, the user will do this on public transport and will do so roughly five seconds after the vehicle has gone into motion and it's far too late for anyone to change seats. This is a particularly popular occupation in Japan, where both public transportation and mobile phones are items of national pride with just under 100 million Japanese people replacing their phones every eighteen months.

In Japan, the humble mobile phone contains an internet browser, e-mail services and e-commerce programs built in. In my home, I polish the screen of my mobile phone and try to convince my friends that the reflection is a phone camera.

Notwithstanding the pioneering pace of our Far Eastern cousins, the path of progress is not without its obstacles. Far too few people are spending their money online to create a viable marketplace for vendors and advertisers to justify the outlays involved in setting up these services. The costs of transporting complex signals, such as a television show, over a third generation wave carrying network is far more than more conventional forms of broadcast. The solution, according the great men and the think tanks of our leading broadcasters, is that the future of TV is in a combination of e-commerce and television content.

By pulling their customers in with the allure of free service and content, they may better entice them into their virtual stores, creating a stream of cyber foot-traffic to their merchant's halls. The future of this brave venture is uncertain. As with all scientific progress, the designers do not seem to have any concrete plans for finance but merely to have followed the urge to mix everything up to see what happens.

The more mercenary reader might cry out at this point "Charge them for the service! Cease all this "free" nonsense at once and find a solid revenue stream." A bold sentiment, and I applaud you for it, but your cries are currently falling on deaf ears. Too many people in the business fear that this will simply drive people away, either by turning them off to the entire idea to forcing them into the hands of those hedonistically socialist business models that are still providing their content for free.

One other development in this, the latest in TV technology (this we can safely forecast) that these ideas will soon become omnipresent with programming being beamed to your game console, palm pilot and washing machine. Each device in the home could comprise a home entertainment center of itself and the choice as to whether you watched the television on the more traditional set or on the reflection in my mobile phone would be yours and yours alone.


http://www.rightbiz.com/Article/A-Humorous-Look-At-The-Latest-TV-Technology/11710