Memorex MPD8081 Portable Mini-CD/CD-R/MP3 Pocket Player
See it at Amazon.com for $79.99Average Customer Rating
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Sounds great, less filling!
Mini CD's give you the best compromise between low cost, portability, and compatibility with the most widely available devices. This player plays mp3 format files and normal CD-DA (wav files, red book, whatever) only. If there are any mp3 files on a disk, wav files will be ignored. Disks snap onto a spindle which holds them the way a ratchet holds a socket. There is no backlight and the headphone jack does double-duty as the line output. A dial on the side regulates volume and a small switch controls dynamic bass boost. The only other side-mounted control is the sliding latch for the spring-loaded cover. Overall construction is high quality. On my unit, two small places on the side where friction inside the packaging scraped away the paint--very minor.
Comes with street style headphones and three blank 210 MB mini CDs. If you use headphones you will probably want another pair. The non-adjustable headphones included may be adequate for some folks. Sound is good and noise level in the electronics is quite low. No specs are given. No software is included. There is a 4.5V input in back but no included AC adaptor. The unit powers ON via the play button on top and OFF via the stop button pressed twice. Turns off after one minute of inactivity to conserve power. No batteries are included.
Controls are simple, the manual is clear, functions are intuitive and the unit behaves flawlessly. Mp3 format is the only supported format; the manual says up to 384 Kbps. Also says packet writing and multi-session are supported. I have not tested all of these. I've made one CD-R with mp3's in five directories and one CD-RW containing only two wav files. Both work just fine. Random function is quite intelligent--on a mp3 disk all files in a directory are shuffled (no-repeat) and played before moving on to the next directory. You can fast-forward and rewind within a track for either mp3's or wavs. For me, so far, startup time has been very short (6 seconds for 54 songs), but the manual warns that it may take up to 30 seconds on a disk containing many mp3 tracks.
Only caveats you might consider: A previous reviewer was annoyed by the slight click at the end of a song. I was concerned when I read this but I do not find it to be very annoying. Sometimes (not often) a delay between tracks interrupts the "flow" of a recording and that IS annoying. Side topic: don't purchase a bunch of "extra length" 210 MB cd's before testing them with your burner. My first CD-RW burner (Samsung) had trouble using these so I switched to "normal" 185 MB cd's. I have not tested this with my newer burner and I suspect newer drives don't have this problem.
My review would not have been so long if I wasn't very happy about the product. Amazon has treated me very fairly and I praise them. I do, however, believe that product descriptions here and for other items are somewhat lacking. I highly recommend this product.
(original 01-Oct-2002, additional comment 16-Feb-2003)
Addendum
I'm still pretty happy with it, but I might give it only four stars now. I found others comments interesting; you have to wonder about the people who didn't realize it only played mini CD's -- perhaps this speaks to Amazon's sparse product blurb and single picture. The Memorex web site is woefully lacking in product information, as stated by reviewer "gadget_guy". Battery life is decent; get ten hours from alkalines. I would like for the cover to have less free play--it clacks a bit while buttons are being pressed.
I've noticed some annoying sonic 'artifacts' generated by the player's built-in mp3 decoder that do not happen when I listen to the same files with the computer. I'm going to re-encode the problem albums using a different bit rate. (One of them is Peter Gabriel's "melting face" album which is bizare enough without any help from the decoder.) Software tips: I've played around with Easy CD and Nero Burning; I prefer Nero. I made the mistake of purchasing the mp3pro plug-in from ahead for $19. What good is mp3pro when hardly any device supports it? I switched to the free program called CDex for ripping audio from CDs.
Regarding the inter-song gap created by the player: I began to get very annoyed at this so I searched for a way to rip/encode several tracks into a single giant mp3 file. Long story short, CDex can do the job hassle free. (Wasted a lot of time mucking with the wave editor.) If I had the disk "Abbey Road" I would definitely rip/encode the songs into two or three giant files. Still the best mini-CD player around from what I can tell. Yeah, the iPod is cool, but I'd rather have a new motherboard, Pentium 4, DDR-SDRAM, etc.. for the same money.
Big on Features, Small on Price....and Size. (4.1"X4"X1.2")
1.) This unit has 45 Seconds of Anti Skip Protection in Standard Play Mode. But my guess is that since there are virtually no CD's released on 8 CM Discs that most of you are going to be using this for MP3 Files, in which case due to the compression of MP3's you have 120 seconds of ESP, anti shock protection.
2.) The player does play 8cm/8mm/"Pocket CD's", and will play back CD-R, and CD-RW Discs that have been burned as a normal, un-compressed CD, and/or in a Compressed MP3 Format.
3.) The Player has an MP3 Search Feature that allows you to search by Subject/Title/Artist; it also has a 64 selection memory, and offers a multi-session feature.
4.) The Dot Matrix LCD Display is Large and easy to read and offers 2 Lines of Text.
5.) The player has the standard Track Skip Up/Down, Random Play, and Repeat One/All Feature.
6.) The unit also has a 1 Bit DA Converter.
7.) While I am not a big Ear Bud fan, it does ship with a nice pair that I would rate "better than most" that I have seen on the market.
8.) The buttons and text display are large and well laid out, unlike some of the early units which had text displays that were small and hard to read, with tiny function buttons. They also have marked the Stop/Fast Forward/Reverse/Pause buttons both on the button itself, and off to one side which is handy, I had an older full size CD Player that had the controls marked only on the buttons and eventually the ink wore off the buttons and you couldn't tell what they did anymore.
I own a number of Memorex Products and find them to be very feature rich for their price. I have had great luck with all of their products that I have owned, and would recommend them highly as a manufacturer.
Memorex hits a home run!
The interface is easy to read and navigate. The display shows the Artist and Album Title, essentially everything that you have in the file name.
In MP3 format the songs have 120 seconds of buffer and I have yet to make a song skip, even when jogging on mountain trails. In fact about halfway through a song the CD quits spinning as the songs is already in the buffer. Excellent for battery life.
You can store any type of file on the mini-cd as well, the Memorex will skip over any non-MP3 format file. Perfect for bringing some work home or carrying photos that you want to share, the CD can be read on any PC.
Very versatile, easy to use, great sound, and practically bulletproof song buffer.
[Low] price offsets flaws
It finally died! It got medium levels of use and under some hot conditions. I would have expected to last longer.
TWO YEAR UPDATE:
I now keep this in the (very very hot) car (in the desert) and it's still alive two years later. Gotta like that.
I have given up on using the menu buttons since they are too distracting for driving. Still, it works as a good cheap-and-easy MP3 player. Those little CDs are wonderful.
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STRENGTHS:
* It's [inexpensive] and the small CDs are [an inexpensive], handy format. One little CD holds about four or five regular CDs when ripped to MP3.
* It is relatively simple to use
* I takes advantage of the open MP3 trend and the CD-R burners we now all have.
* Efficient use of batteries. It seems like a pair of AAs last a long time -- certainly WAY longer than a traditional CD player.
* Did I mention that it was [inexpensive]?
WEAKNESSES:
* Lower bitrate MP3s don't sound great or even work.
* It really needs a lid/button lock. It's quite easy to accidentally open or press a button.
* It is a little clunky -- especially when compared to some of those cool MP3 or MiniDisk players.
* The display is slow so you have to stare at it a long time to see all the MP3 tag.