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To: Savant who wrote (6887)8/1/1999 5:59:00 PM
From: Tinroad  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18366
 
The Rio player reviews compendium:
audioweb.com

I got a kick out of this one:

Date: April 15, 1999
IP Address: 140.247.171.97
Charles an Audio Enthusiast from Cambridge MA writes:
Every time I read a review that says how good MP3's sound, I feel embarrassed by my foolish generation. You know why they don't have a bass boost on the MP3? It's not that they didn't THINK OF IT. For the price tag, you would think that the machine could have a f#*!ing bass boost BUT MP3's just don't have any low range frequencies. I don't know if it's specs admit that, but here is my experience. A friend of mine wanted to have a party where he didn't have to change the CD's all the time, so he figured that he would just make a song list on MP3 and play the whole thing. He asked me to set it up. With huge floor standing Yamaha speakers (not great, typical heavy on the bass and low-mid) and the Denon amplifier all boosting the bass to THE MAXIMUM, the sound still had no bass. We then ran it through another EQ to try to get some bass, but the only way to get decent bass was if we boosted the bass so much that you couldn't even make out the words. The sound had to be so altered that you couldn't hear the lyrics. Before you choose MP3 as your new favorite audio format, run it through your stereo system and play it loud. See if you can get a good sound. When you can't, and realize that the file compression is doing more than just making the file size smaller, you can thank me.

EPAC's time is here! All those kids riding around with sub-woofers shaking everything within a 5 block radius ain't gonna take long to sour on MP3.



To: Savant who wrote (6887)8/3/1999 1:07:00 AM
From: bob  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 18366
 
Flash-memory shortage deepens
By EBN Staff
Electronic Buyers' News
(07/30/99, 06:59:15 PM EDT)

The flash memory shortage is growing far worse than observers predicted six months ago, according to several
industry executives, who warned last week that the situation could persist for another three years.

Several vendors, including Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Atmel Corp., last week emphasized the scarcity of flash-memory chips, especially high-density parts, at separate company presentations made at the BancBoston Robertson Stephens Semiconductor Conference here. Citing strong demand from set-top box and cellular phone makers, Atmel is “booked out” [of high-density devices] for the rest of the year, said B. Jeffrey Katz, vice president of marketing at Atmel.

In fact, suppliers are quoting distributors lead times of between 18 and 20-plus weeks, said Jan Salsgiver,
president of Arrow Electronics Inc.'s North American Components Operation.

“I think you'll find that Atmel is not the only one who's sold out,” said Alan Niebel, analyst for Semico Research Corp., Phoenix. “Demand is hot. Granted, pricing is not going up across the board, but for most densities there are certain devices for which prices are increasing.”

According to NECX, AMD's 8-Mbit TSOP product, for example, was priced at a $3.35 low in the open market in early May. By June 25, the price had risen to $5.50, and by July 23, $5.87.

“If you look at [non-AMD] 8-meg products, you'll see they are starting to level off,” said Frank Cavallaro, director of worldwide sales for NECX's Exchange. “Intel's for example was on a sharp incline and has in recent weeks started to stabilize, and other comparable parts have also shown pricing stability.”

Even though customers are starting to see some relief in prices, there's little left to buy. “Most everybody is sold out of Q3 and many are selling out of Q4-both NOR and NAND,” Niebel said.

“Going by fabs being put in place now, the industry is going to be hard pressed to meet demand,” said Ben Anixter, vice president of external affairs at AMD, Sunnyvale, Calif.

Anixter told investors last week that the company predicts a two-to-three-year shortage, despite chip makers'efforts to ramp production and increase capacity. In addition, vendors underestimated demand for flash-memory chips; orders from cellular-phone makers alone outstripped industry estimates by between 50% and 100%, Anixter said.

With that kind of momentum, worldwide flash-memory chip revenue is expected to reach $9 billion in 2003 compared with $2.9 billion this year, according to AMD's estimates.

“Demand is accelerating in the areas of cell phones, PCs, hard drives, and network applications, and the new one is MP3, which is taking the NAND-flash market by storm,” Niebel said.

Following a similar move by Fujitsu Ltd., Toshiba America Electronic Components Inc. (TAEC) is shifting production capacity from DRAM in favor of 128- and 256-Mbit NAND-based flash chips. Toshiba plans to boost the non-DRAM ratio of its memory products, including NAND, to 50% of memory output, from 35% today.

“We are positioning NAND flash devices as one of our core memory products, in addition to DRAM, in response to increasing demand for NAND flash products,” said Bob Brown, president and chief operating officer of TAEC, Irvine, Calif.