My MP Spinner, which was the first unit I ever saw, got it in frys,
plays everything 44.1KHz stereo except 256kbps properly.
Im not sure how it does with lower quality stuff. It has no problems
at all with 112kbps, 128, 160 or 192kbps tho.
Patrick STODDARD wrote:
> Then again, another approach to having a portable MP3 player
> might be to get one of those portable CD players with MP3
> capabilities. The low-end units (roughly < $100) seem to be
> set to only play 128kbps stereo (and sometimes 64kbps mono)
> MP3s, but the more expensive ones often handle other encoding
> rates. You need a CD burner to make your MP3 discs and then
> get a player, but if you already have a CD burner this might
> be a cheaper alternative than players like the Rio. Going
> with an MP3-capable CD player lets you bypass the worries of
> locating Linux software for the player you want to buy/use,
> blank CDs are cheap, and hold a lot. Having 9 to 10 hours of
> MP3 music on a CD beats only 30 minutes or so on the Rio I
> have (using 128kbps encoding) - perfect for most long flights.
> If I need more I can always make a second CD so I don't have
> to listen to the same track twice on longer overseas flights.
--
jkenner @ mindspring . com__
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