converts MP3, WMA, and WAV files to ATRAC (or ATRAC3 in LP2 or LP4 mode) for MiniDisc playback * in-line remote control with 30 FM/7 TV/4 weather band presets * easy group/folder navigation * mini-USB jack * USB (1.1) interface (cable included) * 2 custom EQ presets * G-Protection skip recovery system * Automatic Volume Limiter System * stereo headphones * includes blank MiniDisc * playback time in LP4 mode: up to 48 hours with "AA" battery (not included) * includes SonicStage¨ software CD-ROM * 3-5/16"W x 3"H x 1-5/16"D * weight: 4.1 oz. without battery * warranty: 1 year parts, 90 days labor
This stylish player lets you store up to five hours of digital music and bring it with you on a single, skip-free MiniDisc for about the price of a large coffee. The Net MD is compatible with the MP3, WMA, WAV, and ATRAC3 audio formats, and even comes with a MiniDisc so you can start recording right away. Its USB connection delivers burn rates at up to 32x for your MP3s and CDs. A handy Jog Dial provides easy navigation, and the SonicStage and MD Simple Burner applications let you group your tunes and customize your playing environment.
Using MD Simple Burner 
MD Simple Burner allows you to record music from an audio CD in your computer to the Net MD, without first ripping the tracks to your computer. |
Using SonicStage 
SonicStage allows you to import audio to your computer from CDs and the Internet and then transfer the data to an MD. |
The player's three-line LCD display provides album, artist, and song title information on a clean, single screen. There's an AM/FM/TV/weather radio built into its remote, as well as a headphone jack and headphones, but the single AA battery, which you'll need if you want to use the device away from your computer, is not included. Battery life is estimated at a maximum of 48 hours.
Note: The Net MD's recording features and bundled software are not compatible with Macs.
What's in the Box:
The Sony MZNF520D Net MD Walkman, a digital-tuning remote control, headphones, a SonicStage software CD-ROM with MD Simple Burner, and a USB cable
1 Sony MZ-NF520D Net MD Walkman
Just bought one from Amazon yesterday; hope to get it by Thursday (they are sending it via FedEx!!); am excited, very excited.
2 This MD Parade Needs Some Rain
NOTE: THIS IS NOT SO MUCH A REVIEW AS IT IS A WARNING!
Five years ago, I discovered the MiniDisc format. I think that preciously naive time happened before the mp3 format came stomping into the music world and slew tapes, CDs and MiniDiscs with its mighty clawed feet, and then did a dance on their corpses. At that time five years ago I had no computer, so I was thrilled by MDs. The MD was the perfect replacement for the analog cassette; it was versatile, could be erased and reused, and just looked damn cool.
But Amercia missed the MiniDisc greyhound bus to Acceptance, and the poor unsupported format withered and almost died. But, possibly due to the stubbornness of Sony Corporation, MiniDisc was kept alive for Reasons Unknown, even though it was eclipsed by CD-Rs, mp3 players, and even possibly those little individual song player tapes manufactured by Tiger Electronics for pre-teens.
Though I can't say when, exactly, someone in Sony said, "let's try to re-vitalize the MiniDisc by making them able to talk to personal computers!" Perhaps he'd been on an all-day sake binge. It would make sense, because the idea was at least five years past its prime and smelled like rice-wine. So, the magnificent idea to bring MD into the 21st century spread and took hold in Sony, and has trickled down to us, the Playstation and Walkman-buying American public. NetMD was born.
By the time I stopped using MiniDisc format, I had amassed over 50 of the colorful little buggers, full of songs for CDs that I had since parted ways with, and tapes which I wanted to preserve. At least a fourth of my collection was made of songs that I had written and produced myself, from live shows to sound room practices. And here, dear readers, is the reason this product, or any other NetMD product deserves 1 star:
IF YOU OWN MINIDISCS WITH TRACKS RECORDED ON MEDIUMS OTHER THAN A PC, SUCH AS MD PLAYER TO MD PLAYER OR CD TO MD OR ANALOG TO MD, THE SONY SOFTWARE RECOGNIZES IT BUT WILL NOT ALLOW YOU TO TRANSFER THE FILES TO THE COMPUTER. EVEN SONGS YOU WROTE AND LEGALLY OWN YOURSELF ARE NOT CONSIDERED 'TRANSFERABLE' BY NETMD UNLESS THEY WERE FIRST RECORDED USING A PC. YOUR OWN VOICE IS NOT TRANSFERABLE.
I was so mad that the NetMD I purchased for the sole purpse of transferring the music on my MDs to my computer was unable to transfer a single song, I returned it the next day to Best Buy and got my money back.
So, my advice in terms of MiniDisc and especially NetMD - it's over. The ship has sailed. Remember them fondly, or use them as coasters, but don't get into MiniDisc. It's a dead format and a product whose prime was in the previous decade.
3 Small, fun, and full!
I love this mini disc player. I got it for my birthday when I asked for an MP3 player (thinking I'd get an ipod), but I think I like this better! It's so small and compact that even though the songs need to be stored on discs, it isn't a space problem or a problem to carry them around. One disc can hold lots of music, plenty for going to the gym, going for a walk, or just sitting around, so in many cases, you don't need to carry more than one or two discs at a time!
The software is great as well. Easy to use and it's so much fun making my own mixes and getting songs that I love but didn't want to spend the money on to get the whole CD! Now instead of spending $18 on a cd from which I only want 2 or 3 songs, I can purchase just the 3 songs I want for 99 cents each!
I plan on purchasing the arm-band holder for use at the gym and I agree, the headphones that come with it have a short cord and are huge, so I will also be buying my own headphones.
Overall, very small and easy to carry, fun to use, full of music I love, and for those of you to whom this matters, quite a cute player to carry around!
4 A Great Product - Definitely Recommend It
My husband bought me a Sony minidisc walkman for Christmas last year, because I wanted something that I could use for my work outs. I found this to be perfect for that purpose, because it is small, and skip free. It is very easy to put together your own custom mix of music for whatever purpose, whether it be for the gym or just for relaxing. I can fit close to 70-75 songs (on LP4 mode, I really don't notice much reduced sound quality) on one minidisc. Use the shuffle mode and it's like your own private radio station. You never know what's coming next....a feature that is especially great for working out. Keeps the boredom out of it.<br />
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So, for Christmas this year, I bought him his own. The only thing that I was somewhat disappointed about was that unlike the MD player he gave me last year, this model doesn't come with the cable that allows you to recharge the player. I don't use batteries in mine. I just plug it back into the wall and recharge it, just like you would a cell phone. Even so, you still get plenty of playing time out of ONE double AA battery. <br />
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The remote control is especially great for ease of use while running, etc. I've heard people mention that they wish it came with a belt clip. The walkman I received and the one I purchased came with an arm band as part of the promotion. Sony has this on their website too. <br />
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As far as the headphones, I would agree that they suck. I went out and bought the Sony headphones that wrap around your ear and have the bud that goes into your ear. Those stay put.<br />
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Overall, I would say this is definitely a quality product I would definitely recommend.
5 my minidisc is awesome.
i love my minidisc. i find it to be very user friendly and fun. it also stores about 280 minutes on one disc in LP4 format so there is no chance of running out of music. and since i am in canada, we get the earbuds standard, not the cheap assed foam headphones, and the earbuds are very comfy. i <3 my minidisc
6 Awesome Product
I love my Mini-Disc Player. It's so awesome. I have @ least 5 hrs of music on the one disc that was supplied. The transfer takes like 8 seconds per song, however the conversion from the original form of the file to Sony's Atrac file version does take significantly longer, but if you convert it as soon as you enter the files into your library, you'll barely notice the difference. The radio is awesome with 30 presets. I listen to my Mini-Disc in class. I'm addicted to it and I just got it YESTERDAY!!!
7 Slick
Im not too much into MP3, i was the kind of guy that allways have his caselogic full of CDs and the discman, but i wanted to change to a smaller and better audio device so i bough this Sony Net MD.
And is very cool, storage a lot of songs per MD, the software interface is very easy to use.
The Headphones are realy cheep, but you can use new ones, the buttons are way too small and hard to press at the beggining but you get used to that and no cool blue light for the remote control as shown in the picture, but that is barely needed (in fact i dont use the remote.)
But at the end is a very cool personal audio device, that can give you a lot of hours of music per MD and batery.
If this Net MD included better headphones and easy to press buttons, i would give the 5 stars.
8 Great product
I bought the Sony Net MD at Walmart and it's great and also worth the money. On one disc(which is provided)I can easily fit 5 CD's in LP4 mode. In LP2 mode the sound quality is a little better but you cannot fit that many CD's. The remote is great except for one minor thing... in the picture, it shows the remote with a light up screen, but mine does not light up at all. After the first day of using the remote, I already knew how to work it. The only thing I would add to this MD is a belt clip or something to make carrying it around easier. Overall, I think this is a great product.
9 Very Cool
MiniDisc is probably the coolest format I have ever used; and this player is the perfect newbie model.
Its Ipodesque theme, in-line remote, and FM/TV/WEATHER tuner makes this the MD player with the perfect feature set for newcomers to the MD format.
My first suggestion: If you like storing ridiculously huge amounts of music, or have a knack for hearing al your songs in WAVE without carrying around the CD's then the MiniDisc is not for you. I will not recommend the Ipod, but anyother HDD player will serve this purpose.
PROS: Small, In-line Remote, 45 hour playback on standard AA batteries, FM/TV/WEATHER tuner, uses cheap large capacity MiniDisc format.
CONS: small screen on player itself, extremely cheap stock headphones included, no line in or optical line input for live recording (won't matter to most).
The first thing you'll want to do when you get this player is throw the included stock headphones in the trash. The included headphones are no better than the complimentary headphones given by American Airlines on flights (I tested them). I got the Philips HE592 in-ear earbuds. These are usually sold as "for the Ipod" at Target, however their white and silver color scheme will match perfectly with The MZ-NF520D and they offer superb sound quality. Also, you may want to get rechargeable NiMh's, I bought Rayovac's 15-minute 2000Mah batteries, and they propel the MiniDisc for at least 60 hours.
Appart from the headphone gripe, the MD format is a spectacular format that represents the pinnacle in Magneto-Optical technology. Your new MD should provide many years of reliable and problem-free service. The same cannot be said for other players(Ipod battery problem,HDD issues in the future, etc.)
10 A superb alternative to the iPod and other MP3 players
When the mini-disc format (MD) was invented in 1995, it was viewed as the unwanted stepchild of the CD. However with the explosion of the MP3 digital format in recent years, the MD has now found a permanent niche in portable electronics.
Thanks to the iPod, MP3 players have dominated the industry, but I still had to make an informed decision before dropping the coin for a next-generation portable player. I spent about a month doing research on what worked best for my needs. My girlfriend bought a 20GB iPod a few months ago and I loved it after trying it out. However, I was not comfortable spending $300-400 on one myself, especially after finding out some of the iPod's dark secrets: 1) The internal battery only lasts 10-18 months and is NON-REPLACABLE /NON-SERVICEABLE. 2) You have to send the unit back to Apple to replace the battery, which cost $100 plus shipping. 3) If don't have an iBook or an Apple computer at home, don't bother buying an iPod...Windows and iPods are not very fond of each other, try one on your PC and you may get tempted to put the sledge hammer to it. 4) If you drop an iPod on a hard surface, you just burned a few hundred dollars on the spot. Once dropped, it never works quite the same again. The iPod's sleek but delicate chassis and non-shock absorbent HD casing are a recipe for disaster. 5) The iPod has become a yuppie status symbol in San Francisco, so by principle alone, I will not buy one.
Since buying an iPod was no longer an option, I looked high and low for an alternative. I wanted three features above all else: affordable price point, compact size, and satisfactory music capacity. I discovered that all the 20-40GB iPod clones (iRiver, Lyra, Nomad, etc.) are too expensive and too much of a liability if damaged. In addition, I only wanted a device for working out or when I am using public transit for work. 20-40GB will fit my entire music library but I will never need to use all of that capacity all the time-so I went to the other end of the rainbow: smaller flash-memory players
I loved the portability of flash media players but the capacity is the direct opposite of the giga-players. Smaller players usually hold 128 or 256MB of memory (a couple of newer models are in the 0.5-1GB range). This is not enough memory to hold enough music without worrying about when to switch flash cards. Also, flash memory is very pricey, so what you save on the player, you will spend on the memory. You're better off spending the money on a high-capacity unit.
I finally looked into Sony's MD player line as a alternative to HD-based players and am very pleased with the information that I found, so I bought the MZNF520D at a local shop. It was a great decision. I have summarized the pros and cons below:
PROS:
1. MD optical media is cheaper compared to USB flash media. Even though one MD only holds about 160MB of data, you can still fit about 3 hours of music of converted ATRAC3 music on one disc at standard LB2 speed (CD quality). If you compress the data to LB4 speed, you can cram more than double that capacity with some loss of quality (tracks sound like a low-spectrum FM station). Even on LB2 mode, there is plenty of music to keep me busy during my workouts and commute.
2. The player has G-Protection shock absorption, so there are no skips and the player does not fall apart if dropped. I shook the player "like a salt shaka" and not one skip!
3. It has a remote, unlike most other MD models (not even the new Hi-MD MZNH600 has a remote). The remote is a bit clumsy for larger hands but I'd rather have a remote instead of digging around my pockets to change tracks.
4. Sleek styling like all things Sony.
5. Light and portable, comparable to a deck of cards.
6. Cost, cost, cost!! You can get the player, a USB cable, headphones plus an 8-pack of blank discs for under $200.
7. Ease of use: PC based software is relatively easy to use. Converting MP3 to ATRAC3 is a snap. I didn't even bother to read the manual, but then again, I am a bit of a tech-geek. Novice users may want to read the manual first before transferring files.
8. MD media is rewriteable (up to a million+ times according to Sony) with virtually no loss in quality.
CONS:
1. No USB 2.0 support, so files take a bit longer to load onto the MD. A 6 minute song takes about 45-60 seconds to transfer at LB2 speed.
2. No belt clip (something I sorely miss).
3. Volume and bass management are a bit on the tinny side. I did solve the problem by using my pro DJ headphones. Using good ear buds will suffice during workouts.
4. Speaking of headphones, the player includes those cheap, stock, foam-ear headphones. The good news that a good pair of Sony ear buds cost about $10.
5. You may want to spend an extra $50 or so and get the new Hi-MD units, like the aforementioned MZNF unit. Hi-MD players have the new 1GB capacity discs. I may want to upgrade to a Hi-MD unit later on but I am not an early adopter. Top-of-the-line Hi-MD players cost over $400. I'll wait a couple of years when prices go down.
6. No microphone, which means no live recording capabilities, a feature only found in older generation high-end MD players. Not a big deal.
7. No AM radio. Again, no big deal.
I am very pleased with this unit and highly recommend it for anyone who does not want to be an iPod clone and want a reliable, easy-to-use, ready-to-go player for working out or relaxing. 5 stars, baby!