TDK MOJO Portable CD-MP3 Digital Jukebox with 8 Minute Anti-Shock and Artist, Title, Genre, and Album Directory
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The contents of the disc are as follows: TDK Navitrack Software will allow you to rename MP3 files by copying Artist, Title, and Genre information into the filename; and MusicMatch Jukebox is a music management program for ripping and encoding MP3's.
The requirements for use of this software are fairly minimal, including WIN 95 or higher, pentium 150 or higher, 32 MB of RAM or higher, and a soundcard. The TDK Mojo will also display ID3 tags (Title, Artist, Genre) and FIF (Field in Filename).
Because of this FIF feature on the Mojo, it is fairly easy to create playlists. With some MP3/CD players, I've heard that it is nearly impossible to find the songs you want, or very hard to navigate to them. TDK has solved this problem. If you have a directory structure set up on a CD-RW or CD-R, you can access the songs almost any way you want (e.g. Mojo can display all artists, or all songs by a particular artist, etc.).
The sound is also impressive, as well as the price, for so many features. There are many settings to make the sound better, like EQ settings, bass settings, etc. There are many other features (small and thin size, light weight; big, easy-to-read backlit LCD; hold button, etc.) and good reasons to buy the Mojo instead of another MP3/CD player, but I can't discuss them all. The manual explains everything and guides you through the use of the features in an easy and orderly fashion.
The only thing that bothered me with this product, although a minute bother, was the fact that when playing certain discs, the Mojo would make a quiet droning noise. Don't misunderstand me, though, there is no problem with the unit, it just does that because it is reading the disc so fast in order to read extra data into the memory buffer to eliminate skipping. Overall, I would chose the Mojo first, and second, the Rio Volt because they are the best two out there.
Some minor problems,
Pros:
Backlit screen is awesome.
Navigation with buttons and in menus is easy and intuitive.
Headphones are not bad though cord is a little short.
Comes with batteries!
Cons:
Contrary to what it says above, you can't navigate by album, it's just Title, Artist, or Genre, or you can navigate through the directory structure. The directory structure navigation is especially useful if you use the following structure: Artist->Album->Songs.
Making a playlist is easy and very useful, but you can't specify any order to the songs in the playlist. With random mode off, they are played in the order they were burned to the CD, which might be annoying if your CD burning software burns the files in an arbitrary order like mine does. This means there is no way to tell the player to play songs in the normal order on an MP3 album. I haven't tried the included software yet, maybe that burns the files in alphanumeric order, I'll report back. I really wish there was a way to queue up songs though.
Renaming all my mp3 files is tedious. The Navitrack software doesn't automate the conversion of mass files to the proper naming format unless the ID3 tags are setup right, and mine are certainly not.
The plug for the AC power source is not the same size as the one that goes with the tape/cig lighter/car kit power plug I have, it's slightly smaller. Why can't they just make them all the same size? Be aware that you may need a TDK compliant car kit. The AC adapter plug also doesn't stay snug, it's a right angle plug, and it likes to turn itself with the cord pointing down, which interferes with the surface it's resting on.
Wow I'm pretty picky. Despite these minor compatability issues and left out features, the player works really well, and what it does offer is pretty impressive for such a low price. The bluish 4-line display and interface really make it fun to browse through your music.
A great MP3/CD player, but not for exercising--fair software
The player's interface is great, and I hardly needed the manual. The Navitrack software is not user friendly, and will not easily convert your MP3 files to FIF format--you have to go directory by directory through your MP3s, which is daunting to do with over 10GBs of MP3s on my computer. Also, the instructions do not mention this, but converting your files will render them unreadable in MusicMatch until you re-map the music library after conversion. The FIF format allows the player to easily read the ID3 tag information at the front of the MP3 file, rather than in the back like normal--and allows very easy navigation and custom playlists.
The player is well-built and the sound quality is surprisingly good. It does go through batteries at a greater rate if you do anything other than listen to it without interuption at a low volume; 10 hours is rather optimistic in my experience, so have some extra AAs.
I will use this player in my car and on my motorcycle, but not for jogging. For none-active applications, it will provide hours and hours of great music. Don't buy it jogging (or other active/jarring activities) is one of it's purposes for you--get a solid state memory player instead.
Excellent!
Value For Money - Doesn't Make Any Claims It Can't Meet!
You've read about all the pros of this player: great sound, easy navigation, value for money, cool indigo display and many more. Then there are the cons: styling, battery life, CDRW compatibility, skipping, lack of remote and carrying case. I won't focus on those anymore (since they are all true) but will just comment on the features that matter to me.
CDR/CDRW Compatibility - For the record, the manual does say that the Mojo WILL NOT play CDRW formatted for packet writing. AND IT DOESNT just like the earlier reviewer mentioned. I used IN CD to do it and it failed just like the guy mentioned. I then used Nero to REFORMAT my CDRW and use that program to burn the songs and it was fine. You can't blame the Mojo...you just wish TDK put that fine print OUTSIDE THE PACKAGE to warn buyers.
So don't think you can use a CDRW like a floppy; you'll have to use a different software like Nero. NO CDRW PACKET WRITING. Period.
As for CDR types, I tested every type from the cheapest generic ones to the quality CDRs...Mojo plays them all flawlessly! I have also tested its compatibility to WRITE ONCE and MULTI SESSION CDRs...Mojo can handle them both.
DOESN'T SKIP...IT STOPS! This was the worst let down. Please note that the Mojo doesnt claim to be JOG PROOF...because it aint! MP3s will play...during jogging...but when the spin up starts for the next song, it will stop playing until you slow down. So for any exercise, its (Brisk) WALK, DON'T RUN! Sometimes it will play 2 or 3 songs during a run, but it will eventually stop between songs...When that happens, you will have to slow down and wait for it to pick up again. At worse, it will stop in the middle of a song.
AUDIO CDS - I don't know if its just my unit, but the Mojo FAILS TERRIBLY WITH SHOCK PROTECTION FOR AUDIO CDS! BE WARNED! It just comes to a grinding halt with constant jolting. I am not that disappointed since I bought this for the MP3 CDs, and in that area, the Mojo delivers acceptable shock protection.
GREAT SOUND & NAVIGATION! 2 Technical/Electronic Websites compared Mojo Vs. Rio's SP250: both commend Mojo for having better sound and easy of navigation. Thats was an important point for me. And yes, this player has LOTS OF SOUND to put out and EQUALIZATION and BASS BOOST is good. Nice headphones too,...compare that to SP250 notorious earphones (Check out the SP250 reviews). The only thing to really mention is that it does have a 2-3 second gap between songs...so you'll have to be patient.
SOFTWARE - I've used the Musicmatch software to rip CDs and its VERY EASY to use and FAST! Haven't used TDK's Navitrack since renaming the files in FIF format in Explorer was good enough to get the display I wanted on the Mojo LCD. Did I already mention its so fun to watch the display sometimes? Cute Display!
BATTERY LIFE - As the previous ones have already mentioned, GET RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES! One charge will last around 4-5 hours.
HEAD TO HEAD:
TDK MOJO vs. RIO VOLT SP250 - The latter cost more, makes you pay for a not that great FM Tuner (See reviews) and other knick knacks that aren't worth the additional cost. Technical reviews also complain about the weird navigation of the SP250. The only advantage the SP250 has is the remote and I'm not sure how the SP250 performs in shock protection.
TDK MOJO vs. HDD Players - The Mojo costs FAR LESS than those 6, 10 and 20 GB HDD Players. Not to mention, they appear to also skip anyway during jogging. (See Reviews) They are just as big and will eat up batteries twice as fast as the Mojo. I also like the fact that I simply load a CDR with 10 albums and I am off. Mojo delivers value for money!
TDK MOJO vs. 16, 32, 64, 128MB MP3 Players - Size does matter...but blank CDRs cost so much less than memory cards. Plus, if you have a home or car stereo that has an MP3 player, your MP3 CDRs can go from your Mojo to you car, house, and back! Lets see your smart media do that! And let's face it, how can you even compare the Mojo's 10 hours of music to these 2-4 hour ones?
So I rate the Mojo very well and worth your money. Biggest drawback was the skipping, but all the other features still give it an edge over the competition. 4 Stars (due to lack of remote and skipping!)
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED! :)