Compras Nikon Bluetooth |
My Nomad IIc, which is identical to the other Nomad II products
minus the FM radio, has been a very enjoyable experience. It has:
* 0 to 128MB of internal memory, depending on your price range
(mine had 64MB and I believe it is only available in 128MB now)
* 0 to 128MB of external memory add-on capability with SmartMedia
or SSFD (solid state floppy disk) memory card slot, for a total
of 256MB of memory possible (I added a 128MB SmartMedia card to
mine because my Olympus Digital Camera also uses this external
memory type)
* Small size and awesome sound with 6 selectable base/treble
settings (normal, pop, rock, classic, jazz, and one you setup for
your listing taste).
* Software that allows you to transfer songs on your CDs directly
to the Nomad IIc with a quality level(file size) you select.
I found 32KBps sampling rate(file size) provided about 1 song
per megabit of Nomad memory with good sound reproduction (if you are an
audiophile you can sample up to 160KBps if you want to, or
about 1 song per 5MB of Nomad memory).
* A Digital Tape Recorder which I tried but it didn't seem to
pickup very well. I removed one star rating for this and it
may have been cockpit problems cause I don't use it anyway.
* An FM Scanning Radio on Nomad II models, which mine wasn't
so I can't rate.
I am very happy with my Nomad IIc and would highly recommend it
for those looking for a practical, quality, MP3 player. Imagine
carrying around up to 25 of your favorite CDs(assuming 10 songs
on each CD) in an all solid state product the size of a pack of
cigarettes, but half as thick! No bulky CD player with CD case(s)
to carry around(and possibly lose) and no switching of CDs, they're all in this little player!!.
Happiness isn't something you experience; it's something you remember.
-- Oscar Levant
I had a feeling once about mathematics -- that I saw it all. Depth beyond
depth was revealed to me -- the Byss and the Abyss. I saw -- as one might
see the transit of Venus or even the Lord Mayor's Show -- a quantity passing
through infinity and changing its sign from plus to minus. I saw exactly
why it happened and why tergiversation was inevitable -- but it was after
dinner and I let it go.
-- Winston Churchill