And The Silence Was Gone!

January 30, 2009

Today i’ve bought myself a new toy!  Namely this little fellow:

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A Sansa Fuse!  I already had a Creative Zen MicroPhoto mp3 player for quite some time now and it was my trusted companion through thick and thin.  We have been through a lot together and this is not a goodbye blogpost my good friend!  But although you are brilliant with my precious music files, you have one big flaw in your design.  You don’t play Ogg and/or Flac files and your idiotic maker in all his stupidity refuses to teach you that (in the form of a firmware update or something).  Don’t take it personally, i still love you, but he can go f*ck himself!  That’s why i started to look for an alternative that 1. had Ogg and Flac support and 2. was Linux-friendly.  After reading a lot of reviews and visiting many sites of mediaplayer manufacturers, the obvious choices were one of the iRiver or Sansa players.  I chose the Sansa Fuse because you can increase its storage capacity with Micro SD Card’s and also because it had a rather nice price tag. :P   I bought the 4 gig model that included a free 4 gig Micro SD Card, so that made it 8 gig for the price of 4!  Plugged my new buddy in and my PC immediately recognized and mounted it with a nice icon on my desktop.  Now that’s what i call Plug and Play! :P   I dragged some songs into it’s music folder, detached the Sansa and was greeted by welcome screen and a rather nice looking interface.  And half a minute later i also figured out that round button isn’t for pressing but more like a wheel!  I quite like the interface, but when i was exploring my song collection i noticed that not all the songs i copied on to its drive where showing.  To make it worse, the songs that weren’t showing were the Ogg and Flac ones!  Another minute went by when i found out that you needed to update the Sansa’s firmware in order to get the Ogg and Flac support.  And the download section didn’t contain any Linux version of their firmware updater.  Again a couple of minutes later i discovered why!  You didn’t need that updater!  I just had to download a small file, drag it into the Fuse folder on my desktop, detach it from my pc and start the player.  A pretty looking dialog with the words “updating firmware” showed up and half a minute later it was finished.  This time all my files were showing and playable!  The sound quality is comparable with my Zen and that means it’s superb!  Another big plus for the Fuse compared to the Zen is battery life.  The Zen can do about 8-9 hours max on a full battery, but the Fuse literally can go on 3 times as long!  Yes i like my new toy and i hope it’s as robust as the Zen. (that after almost 3 years still works brilliantly)  But only time can tell…

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