Post by MugRB on Feb 14, 2010 1:22:42 GMT -5
I went out and bought a relatively modest priced MP3 player the other day. I paid $29.99 for it. Has a capacity of 2GB. I was inspired by one my sister had & she sort of thought about giving to me, but wasn't too sure. So I desided to go ahead and buy my own. She had an iRiver 4GB MP3 player. It has a few nicer features as it can also charge a rechargeable AA size bettery.
As to the one I got, it's made by SanDisk. Model m250, 2GB. My orginal reason for getting it is to listen tot he music I like that I have already on my PC, to be used in either my car or pickup. The car & pickup has a standard audio CD player. Either I am changing stations via the presets or popping in CD's often. With this product I can listen to all the music I like without ever having to change another CD or channel hopping. And spend more time watching the road ahead. I also bought a Sound Feeder most commonly called (now a days) as a FM Transmitter. It plugges into the 3.5 mm earphone jack of the MP3 player and re-transmits the audio to the vehicle's stereo. I do have a MP3/WMA compatable CD player, but that only holds 700 MB per CD. Which is still better than a standard audio CD. But that MP3/WMA CD player isn't mine.
I've already been told I wasted my money on a cheap product that doesn't do a whole lot. Was told I should have bought an iPod instead as it is more versitile. I don't want to carry around an expenisive product that would surely be something someone would love to break into a vehicle and steal. Besides, I just wanna listen to my music collection I have. I don't need all the bells & whistles too.
As to the one I got, it's made by SanDisk. Model m250, 2GB. My orginal reason for getting it is to listen tot he music I like that I have already on my PC, to be used in either my car or pickup. The car & pickup has a standard audio CD player. Either I am changing stations via the presets or popping in CD's often. With this product I can listen to all the music I like without ever having to change another CD or channel hopping. And spend more time watching the road ahead. I also bought a Sound Feeder most commonly called (now a days) as a FM Transmitter. It plugges into the 3.5 mm earphone jack of the MP3 player and re-transmits the audio to the vehicle's stereo. I do have a MP3/WMA compatable CD player, but that only holds 700 MB per CD. Which is still better than a standard audio CD. But that MP3/WMA CD player isn't mine.
I've already been told I wasted my money on a cheap product that doesn't do a whole lot. Was told I should have bought an iPod instead as it is more versitile. I don't want to carry around an expenisive product that would surely be something someone would love to break into a vehicle and steal. Besides, I just wanna listen to my music collection I have. I don't need all the bells & whistles too.