Posts Tagged ‘Flash Memory’

History of CD Walkman (Discman)

March 16th, 2010

The first CD based Walkman was initially launched in 1984 — the D-50 (D-5 in some markets). It was officially called the ‘Discman’, and this name has since been used informally to refer to such players. In recent years, Sony has dropped the Discman name and markets all its personal stereos under the Walkman brand.

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Sony Ericsson W950i – Music in Its Veins

February 10th, 2010



The Sony Ericsson W950i represents the apex of the hugely popular Walkman line up of music centric phone from Sony Ericsson. Quite obviously, the Sony Ericsson W950i incorporates the best of the feature compared to any other Walkman phones. Infact, the Sony Ericsson W950i is the first, and currently the only smart phone from the Walkman family with Symbian operating system v9.1 and UIQ 3.0 interface.

The handset borrows its looks from one of the company’s business solution – the Sony Ericsson M600i. Thus the Sony Ericsson W950i looks like a PDA with a touch screen and dimensions reading as 106 x 54 x 15 mm. This Mystic purple coloured mobile phone is very easy to operate. Apart from navigation through stylus on its large, TFT based touch screen, the Sony Ericsson W950i also has the convenience of Handwriting Recognition and Jog Wheel. Considering the device’s 3G capabilities, its weight of 112 grams is next to nothing.

The handset supports triband GSM mobile network apart from 3G (UMTS) networks. In absence of 3G, the Sony Ericsson W950i uses its embedded GPRS technology to provide you with mobile internet at a decent speed. The handset features an Opera 8.0 web browser for hassle free surfing of WAP 2.0, xHTML and HTML web pages. Being the leader of Walkman phones, the Sony Ericsson W950i exhibits great media playback skills. Loaded with an upgraded Walkman media player v2.0, the mobile phone plays media files of Mp3, AAC and MPEG4 formats with immense clarity.

Its massive flash memory pool of 4GB makes sure that none of your favourite tracks or videos is left out due to insufficient memory. Download as many songs as you want from the Internet via 3G/GPRS, or locally through Bluetooth and USB. Enjoy them on a pair of Bluetooth stereo wireless headset or any of your preferred headphones – after all, the Sony Ericsson W950i is all about mobile music without any compromise.

By: Samuel Herrick

Mp3 Player If You Are On The Move

December 13th, 2009



An Mp3 player is also known as a digital audio player, and it has become a regular fixture in our everyday lives. Everybody seems to have one these days. Walking the dog, at the gym, traveling to work, the idea that you can carry your entire music library with you anywhere is extremely appealing to most people.

MP3 players have made music easily accessible to everyone. You can simply download the songs from the free download sites and save them in your player and carry with you everywhere. Nothing could be better when you are stuck in a massive traffic jam and don`t know how to while away your time.

Mp3 stands for Moving Picture Experts Group layer III, and can be seen as a technology which audio data can fit smaller memory space, without any loss to audio quality. Raw audio data is normally very large and difficult to use on portable devices because of the lack of available storage. A standard audio CD can hold up to 80 minutes of audio data. With Mp3, about ten times more audio data can be stored in memory of the same size.

Although you will find many mp3 player brands in the market, there are mainly three Mp3 player types, mostly based on memory capacity. The Mp3 player with hard drive has the highest capacity and is often called a Jukebox Mp3 player. Examples are iPod video, Sony Walkman. The Micro Mp3 player with hard drive has a lower capacity and is lighter than an Mp3 player with hard drive. Examples are iPod Mini, Zen Micro (Creative Labs). The Mp3 player with flash memory is the smallest in size with the lowest capacity, and is very light. An example is iPod Nano.

An Mp3 player with hard drive is good for travel or for those compelled to be away from their computers for long periods of time. It is ideal for listening in the living room, and it can be connected to external speakers. An Mp3 player with flash memory is useful while jogging or at the gym because of its lightness.

Mp3 players were introduced in the early nineties, and ever since then, there has been a running argument over audio quality. A lot of people feel that Mp3 compression has an adverse effect on the quality of the sound; the others argue that the Mp3 audio format just removes the frequency of audio data that cannot be possibly heard by people, so there is no real loss in the sound quality.

More and more new features are being added to the Mp3 player with advancing technology. Some have built in digital photograph albums, as in the later generation iPod, and you can download and access your pictures while you are on the move. Some have analogue radio and digital radio receivers.

It is usually believed that MP4 is just a modern and updated version of MP3. But it is not so at all. It is something very different in its features. MP3 can be considered to be of a particular category belonging to audio formats, whereas MP4 is considered to be in a container format. However in spite of these differences, mp3 files can be run in either of the players.

One thing you will do well to remember is that your Mp3 player sound quality is only as good as the headphones you are listening with. So do spend a little time and money on superior quality headphones.

By: Roberto Sedycias