bbergman
Member
Registered: Apr 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
Posts: 3 |
First of all, I think it's super that the Inno guys are participating in this forum, and taking the time to interact with the users.
I'd like to take advantage of that and comment. I relish the idea of having an MP3 player for the HS, but the specifications as described by Inno will deter me from buying it. Here are my reasons:
1) Batteries. I agree that you're sort of stealing from Paul to pay Peter by complaining about the lack of internal batteries, but it DOES matter. I depend on my HS being pretty much usable anytime, and if I am constantly worrying about the lifetime of the batteries (especially as short as 5-7 hours), I am held hostage by carrying around an extra set "just in case". I could care less whether my MP3 player batteries expire, as long as my HS batteries are in full force. Having an internal set of batteries on the player would solve this problem. I realize space is an issue, but I'd much rather pay for a little rechargeable lithium-ion "gum pack" on the thing than to have it eat my HS batteries.
This would also give us the added advantage of being able to play the unit outside of the HS. Which brings me to my next point:
2) I am the owner of a good half-dozen modules, and I expect to get more. There is only ONE slot, and already the modules are competing for priority. What good is an MP3 player (without integral power source) to me when I have another module in the HS? None.
For example, I'm traveling by train up the coast, and I want to play some Tiger Woods golf while listening to music. Can't do it. I can do one or the other, but not both. Same applies for any other module.
3) Cost. $225 isn't TOO bad for an MP3 player, but when you figure in the issues above, it becomes unacceptable. I'd rather pay for some little rechargeable guy that I can carry with the HS and get FULL functionality from both. Heck, right now I carry a Sony MZ-R37 minidisc player, and damn, that's about the perfect package. The unit is smaller than a HS, lasts 13hrs on rechargeable batteries, and I can carry around 74min/disc of awesome music at all times. It cost me $130, NEW.
If Inno finds some way to get an MD player into a springboard slot (with its own power source, yada, yada), I'd be interested in that...
4) Buying a Inno MP3 player ties me into a particular platform that will quickly be obsolete. By that, I mean that MP3 players have been improving and evolving so fast it's hard to keep track of them. Look at the new Sony "stick" MP3 player. In another year, we're going to have even smaller and more powerful MP3 players to choose from. If I buy an Inno player, I'm *forced* to use it with the HS or else I can't use it. That means I'm effectively tied to it until or unless I purchase a standalone player.
The same logic applies to springboard modules. We're less than a year into the HS, and already we've got 10-12 tangible products, and another 10-12 vapor products. Imagine what it will be like in 12 months... I can easily envision myself finding some super module (perhaps like the SixPack!) that I just MUST have for my HS. If that's the case, I'm not going to want to pop it out just to play music.
My best advice: add external power to the player and make it cheaper. You do that and you have a good chance of getting back my vote. Right now, the cons outweigh the pros.
thanks,
bruce
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