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Technology Stocks : e.Digital Corporation(EDIG) - Embedded Digital Technology -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bob who wrote (4244)5/15/1999 10:13:00 AM
From: bob  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 18366
 
We get a mention here.

Portable Music Revue
Get ready for a jazzy selection of portable Web music players.

By Carol Levin

May 14, 1999 --

Consumer electronics companies didn't take
too long to catch on. People don't want to
download music from the Web and listen to it
on their PCs. They want to take their tunes
with them. Diamond Multimedia started the
trend when it released the Diamond Rio
PMP300 Portable Music Player last fall. So
far, at least six new portable players have
been announced and are expected to hit the
market imminently. Others are likely waiting in
the wings.

Diamond Multimedia recently started shipping
the Diamond Rio PMP300 Special Edition,
which adds a 32MB flash memory card to the
original Rio's 32MB and is upgradable to
96MB. Diamond also redesigned the player
with a translucent blue case.

One of the most anticipated players is the Creative Labs Nomad, a 2.5-ounce
gadget that plays MP3 music files and includes voice recording, an FM tuner,
and an LCD screen with scrolling text to view artists' names and song titles.
Available early this summer, the 32MB model ($169.99) will store and play up
to 60 minutes of music; the 64MB model ($249.99) adds a 32MB flash card.
A desktop docking station is designed to let you easily download music from
your PC to the player. Creative Labs also launched a Web site,
www.nomadworld.com, which offers music and audio content as well as
exclusive tracks from unreleased albums. The Creative Digital Audio Center
lets you convert your own CDs to MP3 files.

Later in the year, we will see the introduction of the diminutive Samsung
Yepp ($199), a 2.3-ounce MP3 player with 32MB of RAM, an FM radio, a
voice recorder, and a 500-name phone directory. An LCD will show song title,
length, and lyrics. Samsung is currently selling the unit in Korea and plans to
sell it in the North American market, Europe, Asia, and South America this
summer. It's currently available for online purchase at www.yepp.co.kr.

Meanwhile, some developers are already branching out beyond MP3 by
offering support for alternative digital music file formats. RCA plans to sells its
Lyra digital music player, designed to play MP3 files as well as Microsoft
Audio files. And e.Digital is manufacturing the first portable EPAC player;
EPAC is a compression scheme developed by Lucent Technologies.


Web music players designed for the car are also likely to show up soon,
including an auto version of the Yepp. This spring, Britain-based Empeg
plans to launch the Empeg Car, a removable MP3 player (and FM tuner) that
slips in and out of a car's radio compartment. Serial and USB ports connect
the unit to a PC for quick MP3 downloading. The unit can accommodate up to
two 2.5-inch hard disks, providing up to 28GB of storage--about 500 albums.
The 2.1GB ($999) basic model stores and plays 35 hours of music.

The Nomad device from Creative looks interesting. Perhaps it's a
candidate for MicroOS, and that docking station feature.... Sounds
just like the technology we are using for Lanier's cQUENCE Mobile dication device. Would any of our technically inclined participants care to speculate if we could be involved here??????????????????????

Cheers.

Bob