Rio 500 64 MB USB MP3 Player (Purple)


Compras Nikon
Bluetooth
Special Offer--Get a Free Rio 500 from audible.com: Sign up for a one-year commitment to either the BasicListener or PremiumListener plan at audible.com and get a free Rio 500 digital audio player. You'll also receive a free cassette adapter--a $20 value. Visit audible.com and sign up today.

Download in style! This purple Rio 500 stores up to two hours of digital-quality music and up to 32 hours of spoken audio programs. Rio 500 is also the first portable digital-audio player to support both the Macintosh (iMac and G3) and Windows 9X platforms. Access thousands of music and audio files at RioPort.com and over 16,000 hours of Audible.com audio programs. Instantly create, customize, and mix your favorite music and audio selections on your PC or Mac for playback. This lightweight unit plays skip-free music, as there are no moving parts. It's the perfect companion for active people on the go.

The Rio 500 contains an updated hardware design featuring easily accessible controls and a backlit display that shows song/book title, artist, time, and more. And it uses just a single AA battery for up to 13 hours of continuous play.


1 A very good thing to own
I bought my rio500 about 2 years ago and it has done nothing but make me happy. With the 64MB it has already, thats just the right amount of music for a nice car trip, but if you are like me and need a lot of music, then you can buy an inexpensive smart media expansion card. I had many cards and could have about 5 hours of music all in one pocket...I enjoy how the screen says the title of the song, the amount of time that has passed, and the battery life. I didnt seem to have a problem with the included software, except that its just a demo. But recently i guess i got a virus of some sort, so if i want to format my media card, it would lock up my computer, and i would have to turn off my computer at the tower, which is not good. There are other kinds of software for it that you can download for free online, so please dont let the bad software come in your way from purchasing it. Please read the other reviews because i read them and some have some good points. As for the ones that say that the froze and stopped working, well, thats only if you abuse it too much. My friend had an identical player, and he dropped it into pools and lakes, dropped it down stairs, and other horrible things, so it froze finally.... so, if you take good care of your player, it will serve you well. I hope i helped!
2 Great MP3 player
I purchased this from Audible for 99 bucks about 13 months ago. As an audio book device this is a wonderful player. Upgrade with another 64 MB Smart Media card and you'll get about 9 hours of very good quality spoken word. As a music player it is good but not great. Not enough memory for more than an hour or two of good quality music. The 500 has a quality feel to it that other players do not. It has the look and feel of a first generation device that was over built and probably wasn't intended to make a large profit. Very small, slips into a pocket and is rugged enough to stand up to a fair amount of abuse. Great battery life compared to a minidisc player I used to use - at least 12 honest hours of playback on a single AA battery. Subsequent Rio mp3 players are bigger and aren't as elegant as the 500. Forget the included software. Download RIOsitude from hotfiles.com. A free program that is intuitive to use, fast and reliable. As good as this player is the Apple iPod has established a new benchmark for portable players. The Apple uses a 5 GB microdrive which hasn't proven itself yet in terms of reliability but is certainly a step in the right direction. Bottom line is that the 500 is a supremely good audio book device, a great spoken word device, a good music player but too little memory for more than a couple hours of high quality audio.
3 Some very major flaws, but otherwise a fun toy
First, the good: lightweight and TINY, take it to the gym, or on a plane, and it won't be a nuisance. If you download a firmware upgrade from rioport.com a lot of the bugs are fixed and the interface is improved. Now the BAD: headphones included are crap -ditch them and get new ones right away. Holds about 15 songs on its internal memory - get firmware upgrade to allow you to plug in a 64MB smartmedia card. Everywhere you look it says you can only plug in another 32 but don't listen to that. All in all, I love this thing, its compact size makes it great.
4 Bad product
I bought this last year and it was working fine for about 6 month. Then it suddenly froze and didn't react to anything. I spend several days trying to fix it. I downloaded a program from the website that is supposed to fix that problem. It turned out to be useless. Of course they do not have a tech support you can call. So after a lot of e-mails I was allowed to return the product and got it back after 3 weeks. It was fine for about 2 month and then the same thing happened. In summary this is a bad product manufactured by a terrible company with bad tech support. Don't make the mistake to buy it.
5 GOOD while it lasts...
Hello! i Bought this MP3 player 2 years ago and I was very satisfied with it, until yesterday! It just stopped 4 no reason and It won't turn itself on! I contacted Tech Support but nothin! Watch out!
6 Practical Player with great expandible option
I've had this player for over a year and I must say that it has given excellent performance and reliability. The controls are well organized, and I'm surprised at all the capabilities of the player given the minimal amount of buttons. I thought that instructions could have been more clear on how to use the programming functions and bookmarking functions, but other than those two things everything was fantastic. The battery life is excellent, and the display is very easy to read. The two things that impress me the most, however, is the expansion slot for smartmedia cards. They now sell a 128mb expansion card for only about 85 bucks after discount and rebate. This expands the player's memory to an amazing 192 mb for a price that is way more practical than the price of a Rio800 or the expansion packs for the other new rios. Those expansion backpacks are [bad]. The only reason they switched is so customers could not use something as ubiquitous and mass produced as smartmedia cards. I also thought that it was great that Rio has updates on the firmware of the player, thus as technology progresses, they accomodate by including new features, such as operability with larger smartmedia cards. In terms of software, I've had no problems with the Rio Audio manager for all the time I've had it. The headphones are ok, but I recommend buying a quality headphone, it makes the biggest difference in terms of music experience. I've scoured for better mp3 players and its been about a year and a half and I still think the rio500 is still the best bang for your bucks. Audible.com is offering them at a great price right now as well. Don't be fooled by large memory big prices and slick designs, its about expandibility, simplicity, and affordability...three things that sets this player apart from its peers.
7 Neat little gadget
I recently purchased the Rio 500 to download books for a long international trip. When I got the product (through audible.com), I was pleasantly surprised by the small size and streamline look. The instructions (or lack thereof) leaves little to be desired,however. It was pretty easy to set things up in retrospect but at the time I had some trouble figuring out how to use the software and the actual mp3 player itself. I was happy to be able to download nearly 28 hours of audio books into my player. Like everyone else had mentioned already, the earphones are terrible. I couldn't hear the player even at the loudest volume on the plane so I had to get a new set of earphones for the return trip and that worked like a charm. I haven't yet downloaded music yet but I'm looking forward to doing so as I've been reading that the quality is excellent. Overall, I am pretty happy with my Diamond Rio 500, but I had to knock off a star for the poor instructions, earphones, and included software.
8 Just OK
I got mine in June and it disappointed me. There are better ones for the money. Software is simply awful but it's moderately easy to use.
9 Good Hardware, Bad Software
Great little device, much better than the 300 (which I also have), though not quite as intuitive (meaning I had to actually look at the instructions). More memory, backlit display, track description and USB are all great improvements.

The software however leaves much to be desired. I still haven't quite figured out how to use it, and probably won't bother. Another reviewer mentioned that MusicMatch Jukebox also download to the Rio. I haven't tried this yet, but if it works, it's the way to go.


10 Almost excellent
Having just purchased the Rio500, I must say that I am pretty impressed with the design, ease of use of the unit and the quality of the playback, provided other headphones are used.Two points to note. The Audio Manager is a pain to use as quite a few steps are required to transfer each piece of music. Facility being the watchword of the Rio, this seems a bit of a shortcoming in the software design department. Also, I have not yet been able to transfer 2 hours of music from any source to the Rio. One hour and forty minutes is the most I've been able load before I reach the saturation point of 64megs. Just a couple of things to be aware of if you are in the market for an mp3 player.
11 Great except for the short recording time
When I purchased the Rio 500 I was a bit skeptical, but after I used it for a while, I quickly found out why it was so expensive. This is THE BEST MP3 player yet. It is light, downloads fast and looks pretty cool too. The only thing I was disappointed with was how many songs you could fit on the 64mb memory that was already built in. The rio500 only provides about an hour of playback time. I understand you can buy a flash memory card, but they are very expensive for only a little bit of expansion. I fixed this problem by just deleting songs that I got tired of and replacing them with ones I like. Another really cool thing about this mp3 player is that you can save all of your songs on the provided rioport audio manager and download a book...Then when your done with the book you can just delete it and reload all of your music that you can save as albums. I hope my suggestions will help you on the road to buying something that you will be satisfied of.
12 wait a while for a better price/performance one
I own one for several months but leave it untouched for the last 2 months. It works okay, but just too battery consumption, especially when you download songs from PC. My $20 walkman lasts 5 times longer than Rio-500. Other than this, everything is fine. I think this price deserves a better design.
13 Excellent
The Rio 500 is a great product. It comes with headphones, a carrying case, instructions and a USB connector. I really like it because instead of carrying around ten cd's, each with only one or two songs I like on them, all I have to take is my rio. It is very small and doesn't weigh much. The only complaint I have is the price of the memory cards (which are used to upgrade the memory and number of songs you can have on the rio at 1 time). I highly recomend the Diamond Rio 500 to any and all music lovers.
14 Best available
I'm really enjoying the Rio; use a different headset though for better sound. Only real negative is that it doesnt support NT....but then I dont think any MP3 players do....I am very satisfied!
15 Great product with a few caveats
I am pretty satisfied with my Rio500. But there are a few things toconsider when purchasing one. First of all, don't bother with theRioPort Audio Manager software, it's nowhere near as easy or as intuitive as MusicMatch Jukebox... MusicMatch also downloads directly to Rio, at whatever bitrate you specify.

If you're buying this to listen to Audible books online, be aware that Audible has caused nothing but problems for me. First of all, their software didn't start supporting Rio500 until 2 weeks ago (the Rio hardware was ready and Audible happily sold me books without a way to upload them to my Rio -- bad advertising). Audible only has their Rio500 software in Beta, it's extremely buggy and crashes often. And here's the kicker: If you have an Audible book on your Rio500, you CAN'T have any mp3's on it! It's either Audible or MP3 until you delete the Audible files and go back to MusicMatch to upload your mp3's. Audible says they're "working on it". We'll see.

Given the choice again, I probably should have just waited until the new PocketPC's that support mp3's came out. Especially for the price.


16 Don't like this product
I find this product too expensive you should be able to get an MP3 player that has a gig of space on it for the same price. You can only hold 15 cd-quality songs on it upgradeable to 20. one gig could hold about 200. They have the memory cards to do this but they just don't so that they can make money. I'd wait a while before you buy a MP3 player from anyone.
17 A great product if you are on the go and hate radio hype.
Love to work out to music, but hate flipping through the channels to escape the blah-blah-blah of egotistical radio personalities? Frustrated with positioning a bulky CD player out of your way? I found the Rio500 MP3 player to be the best thing since sliced bread. Not being a high-tech kind of gal, yet somewhat intelligent, I was able to figure out most of the software/hardware without instructions. For the part I didn't understand, I e-mailed Rio tech support and had a full set of instructions waiting for me the next day. In my humble opinion, the sound quality is great, especially when compared to the static-ridden walkman I was used to. I suppose there will be bigger and better in the future, but for now, it was worth every hour of overtime I spent to get it.
18 Excellent Hardware -- Disappointing Software
Needless to say, this is not just a review of the "purple" model of the Rio 500. My remarks apply equally to the "teal" and "silver"

I have bought each of the previous Rio models as they came out, which makes me either an expert or a nut. But the advantages I was looking forward to on this model included the USB transfer speed and the backlighted display with song information.

On these counts I was well satisfied. The USB speed is roughly two to three times as fast as the parallel port speed of the previous models. Certainly not the five times that Diamond claims, but welcome nonetheless. And the backlit display is OK - a little small, but OK. Like the previous "Special Edition" model, this Rio comes with 64MB of storage with the ability to put 96MB on line using optional 32MB SmartMedia cards.

The sound is excellent when listening to songs recorded at 128Kb/s. The controls are frankly not as convenient as the uglier "round" control was. There is now a slider switch that controls on/off/hold, and that's not clever. Because now when you want to slide the switch to "hold" to lock the buttons at their current settings, it's too easy to slide it too far -- to "off." There are also "browse" and "multi" buttons on the side, the latter being a Sony-style rotate-and-push control. The logic of which button controls what is not clear, and on my player there was no manual in the box, on disc or on the Web. So you're pretty much on your own.

But here's the real disappointment: the software. The old Rio Manager was a simple transfer program that let you choose songs from your hard disc or wherever and transfer them to the Rio with little complication. A separate piece of included software (MusicMatch) did the ripping and created the database, if you wanted that. This time out, the Rio Audio Manager does everything, but not too well. To start, it will refuse to transfer anything to your player that is not in its "database", so you have to use their database even if you already have your own or don't want one. Second, it will refuse to add songs to the database if they reside in directories it doesn't like. For example, if you have some files on your Windows Desktop that you would like to transfer to the Audio Manager or to your player -- forget it. Audio Manager doesn't approve of people keeping MP3 files on their Windows Desktop. And if the files don't meet its own standards, it won't load them either. I had some files recorded earlier which played fine on all other softwre players and on my earlier Rios. They will not load on the new Audio Manager.

Want more? When searching for MP3 files on your computer, the software will not look on a Jaz drive or a network drive. Once again, it decides where you should store these files. You begin to long for the simplicity and non-judgmental nature of the old Rio Manager.

The software has lots of other problems, some of which could perhaps be solved with a manual. For example, I could not get the new software to work with the older Rio. I happened to stumble on a batch file that does the trick, but you always have to run the batch file before loading the program for it to recognize the right player. Not too clever.

Wouldn't it be great to just slect some files in Explorer and drag them to a Rio icon? The database idea is very big now, and everyone wants their MP3-related site to be some kind of portal. But the battling desktop databases really reduce the functionality for everyone. Since I still use the database from the MusicMatch software I got with my first Rio, I am hoping that it will soon support the PMP500.

Final Verdict: The PMP500 is a great little player that will benefit from big improvements in the software. You may want to wait until other, better software supports the player.



Sunday, 06-Jul-2008 03:13:12 CDT
Quote of the Day:


This is not the age of pamphleteers. It is the age of the engineers.  The

spark-gap is mightier than the pen. Democracy will not be salvaged by men
who talk fluently, debate forcefully and quote aptly.
-- Lancelot Hogben, Science for the Citizen, 1938

Before he became a hermit, Zarathud was a young Priest, and
took great delight in making fools of his opponents in front of
his followers.
One day Zarathud took his students to a pleasant pasture and
there he confronted The Sacred Chao while She was contentedly grazing.
"Tell me, you dumb beast," demanded the Priest in his
commanding voice, "why don't you do something worthwhile? What is your
Purpose in Life, anyway?"
Munching the tasty grass, The Sacred Chao replied "MU". (The
Chinese ideogram for NO-THING.)
Upon hearing this, absolutely nobody was enlightened.
Primarily because nobody understood Chinese.
-- Camden Benares, "Zen Without Zen Masters"