Remember this little guy? That's right, it's the nearly forgotten iriver B30 which we caught our first glimpses of way back in May. This pmp packs DAB radio with RPG recording for listening later on, a 2.8-inch QVGA display, a microSD expansion slot, and comes in 8 and 16GB varieties with a battery that's supposed to get you 40 hours of audio and about 6 hours of video time. The B30 is listed now on DAD's site for £139 -- though we assume that's for the 8GB model, and that the 16GB will run you more.
Meet our hands: they're all over iRiver's latest DAB+-ready MP3 and video player, the B30 — a glossy 8GB player with digital radio built in.
With digital radio getting a huge boost this week, the B30 is expected to get a huge push as it's the only player that supports digitally-broadcast images such as cover art.
It's a good-looking player, probably meaty enough to crush a medium to large insect. But be warned: it looks like a touchscreen player, but it isn't. Instead, it has touch-sensitive buttons. Epic meh.
It has haptic feedback (quick, little vibrations behind the control pad) for every button press, however, and this, combined with a clear menu system, makes browsing music and video very pleasant.
As for format support, we had the B30 playing AAC, MP3, WMA, WAV, WMA Lossless, APE, FLAC and OGG audio formats, and DivX, XviD, H.264, MPEG4 (simple profile) and WMV video files. DRM-free iTunes Plus downloads are also supported. Our reference video files looked OK, but significantly better screens exist on the market for watching video, such as Cowon's S9. Also, the highly glossy screen made viewing in sunlight a pain in the eyeballs.
The good news is that sound quality was excellent through our reference Denon AH-D5000 headphones, with clear, powerful sound and deep bass. There's a heap of equaliser settings too, including a custom EQ and SRS WOW. In addition to DAB+ information, ordinary album art is also displayed (see a photo over the page), but there's no gapless playback option, so it's no use for fans of live albums.
At least in our office, radio reception was, to be brutally honest, an enormous pile of crap. But it can be good, so long as you get a good signal (and the B30 has a telescopic aerial to help). Radio stations are presented on-screen in a list, and both DAB+, FM and indeed your own voice can be recorded directly to the player's memory. Note that for voice, there's a built-in microphone.
Other features, such as playback of SWF Flash games, a built-in speaker, subtitles for videos, a built-in microSD slot for expanding the internal memory, and being able to capture stills from videos, make this a fully featured player. It just lacks the advanced, pretty interfaces granted to players from Sony or Apple.
The player has already proven popular, as the first shipment of B30s arrived in Australia two weeks ago and has already sold out. The 8GB model is available for around AU$299, while the 16GB model is yet to be announced here — however, it goes for £179 in the UK.
WARNING
![]()
คำเตือน: นี่คือกระทู้เก่าแล้ว
การสนทนานี้เป็นที่เก่ากว่า 90 วัน ข้อมูลที่ปรากฏอยู่ในนั้นอาจไม่เป็นปัจจุบัน
กระทู้อื่นๆล่าสุดในฟอรั่มเดียวกันนี้:
- [ข่าว] หลุด!! ฝาหลัง iPad 3 เหล้าใหม่ในขวดเก่า พร้อมเปรียบเทียบจุดต่างกับ iPad 2 09/02/2012 11:26:02
- [ข่าว] ลือชัด!! Apple เตรียมเปิดตัว iPad 3 ต้นเดือนมีนาคม 2555... 09/02/2012 10:51:13
- [ข่าว] บ๊ะ!! iPhone เครื่องละ 100,000 บาท เช็คราคา ณ.เรือนจำเขาบิน นิยมเล่น Sex in... 09/02/2012 05:31:10
- [ข่าว] iPhone 5 due this summer - Report 27/01/2012 09:00:20
- [ข่าว] Steam launches in-beta iOS, Android app 27/01/2012 09:00:20

































LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



อ้างอิงข้อความ