Creative Zen X-Fi 16 GB Video MP3 Player with Wireless LAN and Built-In Speaker (Black/Silver)
- A firmware bug could result in the player locking when playing the FM radio; to fix the problem upgrade the latest firmware (1.04.08) posted on support.creative.com
- Capacity: 16 GB (4000 songs or 60 hours of video); up to 30 hours of continuous audio playback or 5 hours of continuous video playback on one charge
- 2.5-inch TFT LCD with 320 x 240 pixel resolution: 16.7 million colors
- Supports MP3 WMA AAC5 WAV (ADPCM) Audible 234 audio formats; MJPEG WMV MPEG-4 video (including DivX and XviD); and JPEG photo formats
- 1-year limited hardware / 90 days service warranty
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Creative Zen MX 8 GB Video MP3 Player (Black)
- 2.5-inch color TFT display
- 8 GB of storage with SD card expansion
- Up to 30 hours of continuous audio playback
- Features FM radio voice recorder and clock with alarm
- Supports multiple music formats including MP3 WMA and AUDIBLE 4
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Creative Zen Mozaic 16 GB MP3 Player (Black)
Fantastic Little Player - Love the Speaker
I purchased this to replace my 4 gb Zen Plus. Still works great but I really wanted more capacity. I use them mainly at the gym when working out and on airplanes during travel.
The player itself is great. As other said the buttons get take a little time to get used to but once you do it's great. Sound and battery life are excellent.
The only con as others have said is the HORRIBLE Centrale software. It works terribly on my Vista 64 computer - very slow seems to freeze up. It is useless - I can't believe Creative released this crappy software. I never had a problem with the software that came with my Zen V Plus but this software was horrible. I uninstalled it and was going to return the player but decided to try and use Windows Media Player for syncing music. What I found was that you can use Windows Media Player to sync music and create playlists. It works beautifully and quickly and transferred my many playlists perfectly.
All in all I couldn't be happier.
Update: 5/22/09
I reiterate the 5 stars I gave this player after using it daily for the past couple of months. I find I use the speaker much more than I thought I would and really love it. Sounds great for the size. The 16 gb capacity is amazing - I have still not managed to fill it up. I love the way I can create my playlists on windows media player (I have one for rock one for running one for classical etc) and have it easily sync with the Mozaic. Battery life is amazing and the sound is great. Durabilty is excellent as I have dropped it several times while on the treadmill and it still looks and works fine.More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen X-Fi 2 16 GB MP3 and Video Player with Touchscreen and Built-In Speaker (Black)
Not Ready For Prime Time
I've owned many MP3 players incl. Creative's Muvo Zev V and Zen. What drew me to the X-Fi2 was the larger screen the video out the RSS plus the touch interface and speaker somewhat.
Display: Very pretty 400 X 240. Good quality video and images look sharp and bright.
Audio Quality: I did A/B comparisons between the Zen and the X-Fi2 and the X-Fi2 wins. The top end is smoother and the bass is tighter and deeper and the overall sound is more open. They're similar in max volume but the X-Fi2 sounds better.
X-Fi: I don't use it.
Creative Centrale: Install it then forget it.
Audio Storage: Album art is a problem. The art has to be "embedded" in the ID3 tag for it to appear it's possible Windows Media Player automatically does this. This can also be done with an app like "Mp3tag". Which meant going back and doing that to all 350 albums I had on the old Zen. Note that I don't use any services like Rhapsody or files with DRM so for me playback itself was fine.
Viewing Photos: Some jpgs don't show up except as "?" marks. Not sure why.
Videos: Nightmare. With the avi or wmv that worked fine on the Zen the audio would break up or the vids wouldn't be recognized. Creative Central was unreliable and slow and coverts vids to wmv.
I tried about 6 other converters and either audio or video was messed up or just not recognized (XVid Divx or wmv). Finally tested Handbrake and the X-Fi2 was happy playing those XVid files with very specific settings about 90% of the time. And when it works it looks great.
Video Out: Works surprisingly well but no one will think it's a DVD.
RSS: Run a sync program from the X-Fi2 when it's connected to your PC. Kind of a pain but it works.
Battery: Seems like the charging time and life are on par with the Zen.
Interface: Not easy. A quick light touch mostly doesn't work. Pressing down a larger area takes longer to process so sometimes the fingernail trick is best. And sometimes it just takes a long to to respond in general. It also misinterprets gestures frequently. But with practice it's usable.
The volume control is not immediately accessible (3 steps) on most levels and not at all from the main menu. So trying to quickly turn it down on a sunny day (hard to see the display) is almost impossible.
Trying to do things one-handed is difficult (e.g. walking to the train X-Fi2 in one hand coffee in other).
Summary: It feels that the X-Fi2 was launched before development was complete. The touch interface is quirky the video support is very finicky and the menu design needs refinement. I'm hoping further firmware updates improve things. ITMT the average user will NOT be happy.
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Creative Zen 2 GB Portable Media Player (Black)
Best flash player on the market great even for large music collections
This is a great choice for those people who previously limited their flash players to workout duty or only holding a small piece of their large music collection and having to change the music on it every so often. With a 16GB capacity most people can fit their entire collection on here without difficulty and even have room for some videos.
First impressions of this player are very good. It is extremely appealing to the eye everyone who sees it will ask about it. It is about the size of a credit card just thicker (less than 1/2inch). The front is a very glossy black plastic that looks great until you touch it instantly covering it with fingerprints :) The back is a rough cheaper feeling black plastic. Overall it has a nice solid weight and feel to it but not very heavy. This will easily fit in a pocket.
The 2.5" screen is absolutely gorgeous. Very bright with vivid colors. The viewing angle is very good two people can easily look at the screen at the same time while watching a movie for example. The menus are all nicely animated and intuitive to navigate. The icons and text are big clear and easy to read.
One of the big perks to having so much capacity is plenty of room for videos. This was one of the first things I've tested as it was a big reason for my purchase. First of all it DOES play Amazon Unbox videos perfectly. Transferring files was very easy (just a few clicks) and very quick. The quality of the video was great as well. The max size of videos is apparently 320x240 I have not been able to get it to play anything larger than that. If the video is smaller (for example widescreen) you have the option of playing it at the correct aspect ratio or fill the screen (stretched out). I've gotten it to play videos encoded in Xvid and WMV format. Xvid files were encoded with AutoGK and the WMV files were encoded with Arcsoft MediaConverter. If you synchronize with Windows Media Player you can put in *almost any* video file and it will automatically convert the file into WMV format and then transfer to the player. How long it takes to convert depends on the type of video you're encoding how big the file is and of course the speed of your computer.
Music sounds very good on this player but please... get rid of the stock headphones they are horrible. Using a decent pair of headphones makes a HUGE difference. The EQ options are OK there are about a half dozen presets and a customizable EQ. The "Bass Boost" option just made it worse in my opinion it just distorted the sound. Otherwise it is a very even and balanced sound very similar to the Vision:M.
The FM radio has a whopping 32 presets and the reception is pretty good. Strong stations are in stereo weaker ones come in mono. I haven't had a chance to test out the built-in mic.
I easily transferred music and playlists onto this player from Windows Media Player and MediaMonkey as well as protected music (WMA) from Napster. Everything was very easy usually just dragging and dropping. The speed of transfer is probably the fastest I've seen. I've used this player on XP Home and on Vista Premium 64-bit.
Regarding the SD cards. I think its only a slight inconvenience that the memory card media isn't directly integrated with the other content. Meaning if you have videos on the SD card you don't go to the "Video" menu where all the other videos are you have to access them through the "Memory Card" menu. Once there you browse through the file structure like normal. If you organize the content smartly on your cards you should have no problem. And really its a small price to pay for that feature. Currently SDHC cards are up to 16GB in capacity meaning you could double the capacity and carry around 32GB worth of content in your pocket. Amazing. I tested a Kingston 512MB SD Card and a Kingston 2GB microSD card (with adapter of course) and they were recognized and played the content without difficulty.
A quick note about the firmware. Mine came with 1.10.05. When my player turns off it really turns off. With newer firmwares when it turns off it goes into a sleep mode for a while before it finally turns all the way off. What that means is with the older firmware each time you turn it on it has to "boot" all over again whereas with the newer firmware you get an "instant-on" at the expense of slightly reduced battery life (since it is asleep and not off). Something to consider before you decide to upgrade the firmware.More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen MX 16 GB MP3 Player (Black)
cheaper version of the old Zen: mixed results
I have both the older 8gb Zen (2007) and a new 16gb Zen MX. They are basically the same except that the MX has integrated access to the removable SD card directly from the Creative Centrale software that comes with the it. With the old Zen you had to go into a removable card menu on the Zen and then access the card via the computer operating system to add or delete files. Zen MX also does not have the code for some video formats and the software has to convert them before transfer to the Zen MX; on the old Zen you could just transfer the video files directly to the Zen. Finally the Creative Centrale software that comes with the new Zen MX does not seem as intuitive and user friendly as the older software that came with the Zen. If I had to do it again I would have bought the older Zen rather than the new Zen MX but the older ones are becoming hard to find and are a lot more expensive. Strangely enough the 16gb version of the old Zen is more expensive than the 32gb version!
To answer those who said the Zen MX will not play DRM protected files. Not true. It will play DRM9 protected files but they have to be put on the Zen via the transfer function in the software not through drag & drop because the former also carries over the license info and the latter technique does not. Creative notes this on their web site.More detail ...
Creative Zen MX 8 GB Video MP3 Player (Black)
cheaper version of the old Zen: mixed results
I have both the older 8gb Zen (2007) and a new 16gb Zen MX. They are basically the same except that the MX has integrated access to the removable SD card directly from the Creative Centrale software that comes with the it. With the old Zen you had to go into a removable card menu on the Zen and then access the card via the computer operating system to add or delete files. Zen MX also does not have the code for some video formats and the software has to convert them before transfer to the Zen MX; on the old Zen you could just transfer the video files directly to the Zen. Finally the Creative Centrale software that comes with the new Zen MX does not seem as intuitive and user friendly as the older software that came with the Zen. If I had to do it again I would have bought the older Zen rather than the new Zen MX but the older ones are becoming hard to find and are a lot more expensive. Strangely enough the 16gb version of the old Zen is more expensive than the 32gb version!
To answer those who said the Zen MX will not play DRM protected files. Not true. It will play DRM9 protected files but they have to be put on the Zen via the transfer function in the software not through drag & drop because the former also carries over the license info and the latter technique does not. Creative notes this on their web site.More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen Mozaic EZ300 4 GB MP3 Player (Black)
excellent player
This is the 3rd creative player I have owned. All of them have been excellent. I really like the mosiac the best. The sofware sets up a logical order so I can find stuff like set up the equlizerturn on speaker etc I will say that it did take me while to learn how to navigate the menu options. The speaker is an added bonus. I rarely listen to music mostly audio books. The sound can be addjusted so I can hear the spoken word clearly. I have poor hearing as a result of listening to music to loud when I was younger. Just a word to the younger folks out there. One final thought all of the players Zen nano plusZenV plusand the mosiac 300 do freeze up. I just reset the player it always rebulds and goes to where it left off this is annoying nothing more. When I look back to transister radios i listened to when I was a kid this device is a miracle. Jim C PS I would not continus buying creative if I didnot like the product. I did buy a sansa once e140 did not like itMore detail ...
Creative Zen X-Fi 8 GB Video MP3 Player with Built-In Speaker (Black/Silver)
Excellent player but no fifth star until they bring back analog interface
First an introduction: Recently I've owned and used and liked an iPod 4th gen 80gb zune 80 iPod 5th gen 80gb creative zen vision: m 30gb AND 60gb versions (the holy grail to so many mp3 player fans) and I am a power user with a music library of 35gb all tagged using the free Media Monkey software. I know what I'm talking about. (If you're curious the two ipods were returned the ZVM30 was given to my cousin when I got the 60 the ZVM60 was destroyed in iraq and so was the Zune80)
Looks extremely sexy definitely on the iPod and Zune level of sexiness.
It's ridiculously lightweight and weighs just a bit more than a nano and about half as much as a harddrive bearing zune or ipod.
Video transfer/conversion does not apply to me so I will not be reviewing it.
IM chat gimmick is worthless move along.
wifi connect works and is easy to set up but there is no link to shoutcast or icecast directories. Instead creative "media box" will show up with internet access but has a very limited selection of podcast streams and almost no streaming music.
Streaming music from a local wireless network is very cool but chews up the otherwise good battery life limiting its usefulness.
SD card support is hardly seamless and has a limited set of browsing functions but this may be nitpicking as most players don't bother to include ANY expandable memory.
x-fi sounds "different" but not unanimously "better" and uses more battery not really a selling feature then
The headphones are awesome and while they're compared as worse than the zune 80's included headphones the zen's fit more comfortably (to me) and sound just as good.
The built in speaker is very cool and sounds surprisingly good for its size there is never any distortion even at maximum volume (distortion is what makes speakerphones and other bad+loud audio sources sound so horrible). It is perfect for showing a song to a friend or friends or playing a little background music in a quiet room.
No line out but using the headphone jack at full volume sounds just fine on my car stereo and home stereo with no distortion.
Software:
A lot of people complain about the Creative software but you really never need to use it except for video transfer. I use Media Monkey to sync my music and it works flawlessly. Everyone has Windows Media Player and that syncs just fine with the player. It's an MTP device and that means that a lot of different programs can sync with it. So except for video issues you really have no reason in the world to complain about the creative software.
Buttons:
The nine button grid is 4 directions and a center "select" button and on many menus and lists the diagonal four buttons act as home/end and pageup/down but on many screens they are useless. If they were customizable they could be very powerful! Faster seeking view toggles many possibilities if they were customizable. Firmware update maybe?
I have long fingers and big hands and the player is comfortable to hold but the buttons are small and indistinct you have to concentrate a little to be sure you press the correct one if you are fishing for the next/prev track or the volume up/down buttons in your pocket. The pause button is unmissable though and that is most important.
The zen vision:m's vertical slider with side to side rocking and touchpad tap for select was really perfect for an audio player and I find myself missing it a lot (but I don't miss that player's poor battery life large size or ogreish looks)
A disappointment: On no screen are the grid buttons used to refer to a specific function on a grid on the screen (which would have opened some very quick and intuitive menu options) they are ALWAYS arrow buttons with a center select and sometimes other use diagonal buttons.
Creative have dropped the ball a little by adding four new buttons and not using them to their full potential. The most notable example is that the IM chat function could have used a cell-phone style text entry but instead uses a very obtuse method that keeps the buttons as arrow keys. Once you've moved past the chat function and removed it from the main menu you'll then notice that on the 'now playing' screen the most common and important screen the four diagonal buttons don't do anything at all. :(
The customizable shortcut button is still here and still awesome easily settable by simply holding it down. It comes preset to the x-fi settings screen which should have been integrated into the EQ screen anyway. Mine is set to jump to 'now playing' perfect for changing volume or next/prev track quickly from any menu and then you can press back to return to wherever you were.
The menu button (or "right click" button as I call it) shows the list of options for most screens but the list sometimes runs off the top and bottom by just a few lines and could have been scaled down to fit them all. Would have been nice to enable the 'diagonal' buttons to be shortcuts for some of the common menu items while the menu is open.
The Interface (the most important part of any mp3 player):
It may sound like I'm pointing out a lot of flaws in the device's usability but let me assure you it really is fantastic to use. The device interface is the same as the venerable ZVM and is powerful attractive and simple. The 'right click' menus offer a lot of functionality while being intuitive to any computer user; rather than hide a cluttered pile of settings in the main menu settings screen many settings are accessed from the screen they're related to. I'm a big fan of the ZVM interface and am glad they didn't change it. On the Zen the graphics have been given quite a boost since the ZVM days and the gui really is pretty.
Useful things the Zen players do that ipod and zune do NOT under any circumstances support:
- [zune] sync with 3rd party software
- 'now playing' playlist access
- creation/saving of playlists on the fly
- ability to add a track to the 'now playing' list allows you to build a playlist and not interrupt currently playing track great for playing music for others
- bookmark track positions (great for podcasts audiobooks long music mixes)
- switch between view of albums artists or track in the music menus
- rearrange items when you customize the main menu
- "dj" menu with options like "play popular" and "play highly rated"
- delete actual tracks from within the player
- record voice
- hide photos/video easily obviously to hide porn when showing off your player to your mom
- actual usb port no proprietary connector
- built in speaker
- wifi network access
I see this player is squaring off against the ipod and zune and is already going above and beyond them both feature by feature.
PS:
Nitpicks:
- no rapid way to seek in a track
- no "go to album" or "go to genre" for a track only "go to artist"
- pageup/down buttons stop working when you move "right" to the list of letter shortcuts on a long list and they don't work on the 'right click' menu
- speaker should have been put on the left side your hand ends up covering it up sometimes when you hold it right handedlyMore detail ...
Creative Zen 32 GB Portable Media Player (Black)
Best flash player on the market great even for large music collections
This is a great choice for those people who previously limited their flash players to workout duty or only holding a small piece of their large music collection and having to change the music on it every so often. With a 16GB capacity most people can fit their entire collection on here without difficulty and even have room for some videos.
First impressions of this player are very good. It is extremely appealing to the eye everyone who sees it will ask about it. It is about the size of a credit card just thicker (less than 1/2inch). The front is a very glossy black plastic that looks great until you touch it instantly covering it with fingerprints :) The back is a rough cheaper feeling black plastic. Overall it has a nice solid weight and feel to it but not very heavy. This will easily fit in a pocket.
The 2.5" screen is absolutely gorgeous. Very bright with vivid colors. The viewing angle is very good two people can easily look at the screen at the same time while watching a movie for example. The menus are all nicely animated and intuitive to navigate. The icons and text are big clear and easy to read.
One of the big perks to having so much capacity is plenty of room for videos. This was one of the first things I've tested as it was a big reason for my purchase. First of all it DOES play Amazon Unbox videos perfectly. Transferring files was very easy (just a few clicks) and very quick. The quality of the video was great as well. The max size of videos is apparently 320x240 I have not been able to get it to play anything larger than that. If the video is smaller (for example widescreen) you have the option of playing it at the correct aspect ratio or fill the screen (stretched out). I've gotten it to play videos encoded in Xvid and WMV format. Xvid files were encoded with AutoGK and the WMV files were encoded with Arcsoft MediaConverter. If you synchronize with Windows Media Player you can put in *almost any* video file and it will automatically convert the file into WMV format and then transfer to the player. How long it takes to convert depends on the type of video you're encoding how big the file is and of course the speed of your computer.
Music sounds very good on this player but please... get rid of the stock headphones they are horrible. Using a decent pair of headphones makes a HUGE difference. The EQ options are OK there are about a half dozen presets and a customizable EQ. The "Bass Boost" option just made it worse in my opinion it just distorted the sound. Otherwise it is a very even and balanced sound very similar to the Vision:M.
The FM radio has a whopping 32 presets and the reception is pretty good. Strong stations are in stereo weaker ones come in mono. I haven't had a chance to test out the built-in mic.
I easily transferred music and playlists onto this player from Windows Media Player and MediaMonkey as well as protected music (WMA) from Napster. Everything was very easy usually just dragging and dropping. The speed of transfer is probably the fastest I've seen. I've used this player on XP Home and on Vista Premium 64-bit.
Regarding the SD cards. I think its only a slight inconvenience that the memory card media isn't directly integrated with the other content. Meaning if you have videos on the SD card you don't go to the "Video" menu where all the other videos are you have to access them through the "Memory Card" menu. Once there you browse through the file structure like normal. If you organize the content smartly on your cards you should have no problem. And really its a small price to pay for that feature. Currently SDHC cards are up to 16GB in capacity meaning you could double the capacity and carry around 32GB worth of content in your pocket. Amazing. I tested a Kingston 512MB SD Card and a Kingston 2GB microSD card (with adapter of course) and they were recognized and played the content without difficulty.
A quick note about the firmware. Mine came with 1.10.05. When my player turns off it really turns off. With newer firmwares when it turns off it goes into a sleep mode for a while before it finally turns all the way off. What that means is with the older firmware each time you turn it on it has to "boot" all over again whereas with the newer firmware you get an "instant-on" at the expense of slightly reduced battery life (since it is asleep and not off). Something to consider before you decide to upgrade the firmware.More detail ...
Creative Zen 8 GB Portable Media Player (Black)
Few flaws many pros
IMPORTANT NOTES FIRST:
YES it is iTunes-compatible and YES it is compatible with Yahoo! Jukebox BUT ONLY THOSE TRACKS THAT YOU HAVE PURCHASED AS "BURNABLE". In other words you will not be able to transfer your Subscription or Stream tracks to this device which is only fair (for that you have to have Yahoo! Music Unlimited To-Go which is an invite-based service and thus uncommon). Needless to say you can import tracks from any CD quickly and painlessly and/or copy any wmv/mp3/mp4 or whatever that you already have on your hard drive: the device is browsable with Windows and all you need to do is copy/paste to the right folder.
Now for the review.
THE GOOD:
++ Compatible with an amazing variety of file formats without conversion unlike iPods. Whatever is not compatible the software will convert for you if at all possible. This is a HUGE plus for the computer-illiterate.
++ Great sound quality a bare minimum requirement for a music player.
++ Sleek looks IMO superior to the trite iPod-like spin-wheel design. It certainly got more looks and comments than the iPod I had previously. Also it's more pleasant to hold in your hand: small but not too tiny and very sturdy/solid (which if you'll handle it 8-10 hours a day like I do is a huge plus).
++ The included software is fantastic. It's fast reliable (never froze) and lets you manage files and create playlists quickly and painlessly. Basically anything you can do with the player's built-in software you can do with ZEN Media Explorer from your computer. So go for it.
++ Many complained about the interface but I actually like it very much. The built-in software is easy to understand and utilize. The buttons are a tad tricky but all you need to do is play around with them for ten minutes before you're able to find them blindly by just sticking your hand in your pocket (something you certainly cannot do with iPods whose interface is more visually-driven).
THE SO-SO:
++/-- The SD expansion slot is both a pain and a pleasure. Yes you can basically make this a 16Gb with an SDHC card for a few bucks--but it's true that only SOME content will run off of it and that while you are playing content from the SD card you cannot navigate the built-in flash memory. So caveat emptor... but if you know what you're getting there's no reason to complain. How many times do you really browse your music while you're already listening to something else anyway?
THE BAD:
-- Perplexed about battery life info: "25 hours of continuous listening"? I don't think so. More like 10-12 which is on par with similar devices.
-- The shortest USB cable ever bundled. Buy a cheapo extension from Monoprice right away unless you already own a USB hub. Otherwise your player will lie on the floor or worse hang by the cable while it's being charged and sync'ed neither of which is good.
-- The joystick buttons make a slightly annoying clicking sound not when pressed but when released. However this does not happen on my friend's ZEN so maybe I got a "bad" unit?
-- AWFUL packaging! What were they thinking? Not only is it one of those impossible-to-open blister packs but if you use scissors it's relatively easy to harm the contents... not the player thankfully which is in full sight but the manuals and CD and bundled cables. So be careful.
OTHER THOUGHTS:
** BUY A SCREEN PROTECTOR! Apply it immediately. The screen will collect dust (and thus scratches) within hours like any LCD.
** BUY A CASE OR SKIN! Piano-black finish is attracted to fingerprints like flies to s__t.
** 8Gb is perfect for the serious music listener with varied taste. Buffs and pros want to go for 16Gb. Occasional listeners will do well with 4Gb. Media moguls of course need not apply: that's what the Vision is for.
Overall one of the best entry-level portable music players on the market. The price tag may well be the deal-breaker here: it is cheaper than any other brand music player and it does the same things AND in my opinion more and better. Support by Creative is also famously good so I see no reason not to buy a ZEN.More detail ...
Creative Zen Vision:M 30 GB MP3 and Video Player (Black)
Truly Amazing Gadget!
I've had my Zen M for about 2 months now so I think I have a good feel for what it's pros and cons are. Here you go:
Pros: Beautiful and Bright Screen (displays thousands of more colors than the Ipod video by the way). Even at 50% brightness (which is default setting out of the box) it looks bright!
Ability to Customize most of the features. This includes being able to set your own photos for the wallpaper custom equilizer custom brightnes setting custom shortcut button organization of folders(audio photo video folders)...etc.
Great Sound! This isn't a surprise because Creative develops sound hardware/software like soundcards.
Good User Interface: The thumb scroller interface takes a few days to get used to then it's pretty user friendly. You can customize the sensitivity of it too.
Ability to play lots of different video files like Divx and Mpg4.
This was a big selling point for me. The screen is perfect for watching cartoons and anime on.
Good Size. I'm refering to it's physical size. It's actually the perfect size and feels great in your hand. Still pocketable and still feels rock solid and not fragile.
Displays Album cover art! I had trouble with this function in the beginning only because in order to get it to display the album art correctly you need to rip the Cd album with a program that automatically downloads album info including art. One program that does this is Windows Media Player.
--For the techies that don't want to re-rip everything to get the album art to display just download a small jpeg image of the album cover that is about 150 by 150 pixels rename it folder.jpg make it a hidden file and place it in the folder of the correct album. When you move it to your player it will ask you whether you want to move it to the photo folder make sure you select "no" and leave it where it is.
Cons: There isn't a lot about this player that is negative. But one aspect which is really annoying is that to charge it or plug it to the computer you have to use this tiny seperate adapter that comes in the box. It's the white adapter/attachment that looks like a dock connector. What the heck were they thinking! I have to carry the separate item everywhere I go just in case I need to charge it or upload music. It sucks man! Why the heck didn't they just build all of the ports into the player itself!!
Also they should've included the video output cable instead of selling it separately! Or at least made it use a standard video cable! Also the battery is not removable... at least not meant to be.
These are the only reasons why I gave this player 4 out of 5 stars. Otherwise I would have given 5 out of 5! All in All this player really rocks and is worth every penny! ... and is a much better buy then the "other" competition out there.
Hope this is helpful to you guys. If it is please give me a vote. Thanks!
For more electronics and technology reviews visit my site at:
http://newtechnews.blogspot.com/More detail ...
Creative Zen 2 GB Portable Media Player (Black)
Best flash player on the market great even for large music collections
This is a great choice for those people who previously limited their flash players to workout duty or only holding a small piece of their large music collection and having to change the music on it every so often. With a 16GB capacity most people can fit their entire collection on here without difficulty and even have room for some videos.
First impressions of this player are very good. It is extremely appealing to the eye everyone who sees it will ask about it. It is about the size of a credit card just thicker (less than 1/2inch). The front is a very glossy black plastic that looks great until you touch it instantly covering it with fingerprints :) The back is a rough cheaper feeling black plastic. Overall it has a nice solid weight and feel to it but not very heavy. This will easily fit in a pocket.
The 2.5" screen is absolutely gorgeous. Very bright with vivid colors. The viewing angle is very good two people can easily look at the screen at the same time while watching a movie for example. The menus are all nicely animated and intuitive to navigate. The icons and text are big clear and easy to read.
One of the big perks to having so much capacity is plenty of room for videos. This was one of the first things I've tested as it was a big reason for my purchase. First of all it DOES play Amazon Unbox videos perfectly. Transferring files was very easy (just a few clicks) and very quick. The quality of the video was great as well. The max size of videos is apparently 320x240 I have not been able to get it to play anything larger than that. If the video is smaller (for example widescreen) you have the option of playing it at the correct aspect ratio or fill the screen (stretched out). I've gotten it to play videos encoded in Xvid and WMV format. Xvid files were encoded with AutoGK and the WMV files were encoded with Arcsoft MediaConverter. If you synchronize with Windows Media Player you can put in *almost any* video file and it will automatically convert the file into WMV format and then transfer to the player. How long it takes to convert depends on the type of video you're encoding how big the file is and of course the speed of your computer.
Music sounds very good on this player but please... get rid of the stock headphones they are horrible. Using a decent pair of headphones makes a HUGE difference. The EQ options are OK there are about a half dozen presets and a customizable EQ. The "Bass Boost" option just made it worse in my opinion it just distorted the sound. Otherwise it is a very even and balanced sound very similar to the Vision:M.
The FM radio has a whopping 32 presets and the reception is pretty good. Strong stations are in stereo weaker ones come in mono. I haven't had a chance to test out the built-in mic.
I easily transferred music and playlists onto this player from Windows Media Player and MediaMonkey as well as protected music (WMA) from Napster. Everything was very easy usually just dragging and dropping. The speed of transfer is probably the fastest I've seen. I've used this player on XP Home and on Vista Premium 64-bit.
Regarding the SD cards. I think its only a slight inconvenience that the memory card media isn't directly integrated with the other content. Meaning if you have videos on the SD card you don't go to the "Video" menu where all the other videos are you have to access them through the "Memory Card" menu. Once there you browse through the file structure like normal. If you organize the content smartly on your cards you should have no problem. And really its a small price to pay for that feature. Currently SDHC cards are up to 16GB in capacity meaning you could double the capacity and carry around 32GB worth of content in your pocket. Amazing. I tested a Kingston 512MB SD Card and a Kingston 2GB microSD card (with adapter of course) and they were recognized and played the content without difficulty.
A quick note about the firmware. Mine came with 1.10.05. When my player turns off it really turns off. With newer firmwares when it turns off it goes into a sleep mode for a while before it finally turns all the way off. What that means is with the older firmware each time you turn it on it has to "boot" all over again whereas with the newer firmware you get an "instant-on" at the expense of slightly reduced battery life (since it is asleep and not off). Something to consider before you decide to upgrade the firmware.More detail ...
Creative Zen X-Fi 8 GB Video MP3 Player with Built-In Speaker (Black/Silver)
Excellent player but no fifth star until they bring back analog interface
First an introduction: Recently I've owned and used and liked an iPod 4th gen 80gb zune 80 iPod 5th gen 80gb creative zen vision: m 30gb AND 60gb versions (the holy grail to so many mp3 player fans) and I am a power user with a music library of 35gb all tagged using the free Media Monkey software. I know what I'm talking about. (If you're curious the two ipods were returned the ZVM30 was given to my cousin when I got the 60 the ZVM60 was destroyed in iraq and so was the Zune80)
Looks extremely sexy definitely on the iPod and Zune level of sexiness.
It's ridiculously lightweight and weighs just a bit more than a nano and about half as much as a harddrive bearing zune or ipod.
Video transfer/conversion does not apply to me so I will not be reviewing it.
IM chat gimmick is worthless move along.
wifi connect works and is easy to set up but there is no link to shoutcast or icecast directories. Instead creative "media box" will show up with internet access but has a very limited selection of podcast streams and almost no streaming music.
Streaming music from a local wireless network is very cool but chews up the otherwise good battery life limiting its usefulness.
SD card support is hardly seamless and has a limited set of browsing functions but this may be nitpicking as most players don't bother to include ANY expandable memory.
x-fi sounds "different" but not unanimously "better" and uses more battery not really a selling feature then
The headphones are awesome and while they're compared as worse than the zune 80's included headphones the zen's fit more comfortably (to me) and sound just as good.
The built in speaker is very cool and sounds surprisingly good for its size there is never any distortion even at maximum volume (distortion is what makes speakerphones and other bad+loud audio sources sound so horrible). It is perfect for showing a song to a friend or friends or playing a little background music in a quiet room.
No line out but using the headphone jack at full volume sounds just fine on my car stereo and home stereo with no distortion.
Software:
A lot of people complain about the Creative software but you really never need to use it except for video transfer. I use Media Monkey to sync my music and it works flawlessly. Everyone has Windows Media Player and that syncs just fine with the player. It's an MTP device and that means that a lot of different programs can sync with it. So except for video issues you really have no reason in the world to complain about the creative software.
Buttons:
The nine button grid is 4 directions and a center "select" button and on many menus and lists the diagonal four buttons act as home/end and pageup/down but on many screens they are useless. If they were customizable they could be very powerful! Faster seeking view toggles many possibilities if they were customizable. Firmware update maybe?
I have long fingers and big hands and the player is comfortable to hold but the buttons are small and indistinct you have to concentrate a little to be sure you press the correct one if you are fishing for the next/prev track or the volume up/down buttons in your pocket. The pause button is unmissable though and that is most important.
The zen vision:m's vertical slider with side to side rocking and touchpad tap for select was really perfect for an audio player and I find myself missing it a lot (but I don't miss that player's poor battery life large size or ogreish looks)
A disappointment: On no screen are the grid buttons used to refer to a specific function on a grid on the screen (which would have opened some very quick and intuitive menu options) they are ALWAYS arrow buttons with a center select and sometimes other use diagonal buttons.
Creative have dropped the ball a little by adding four new buttons and not using them to their full potential. The most notable example is that the IM chat function could have used a cell-phone style text entry but instead uses a very obtuse method that keeps the buttons as arrow keys. Once you've moved past the chat function and removed it from the main menu you'll then notice that on the 'now playing' screen the most common and important screen the four diagonal buttons don't do anything at all. :(
The customizable shortcut button is still here and still awesome easily settable by simply holding it down. It comes preset to the x-fi settings screen which should have been integrated into the EQ screen anyway. Mine is set to jump to 'now playing' perfect for changing volume or next/prev track quickly from any menu and then you can press back to return to wherever you were.
The menu button (or "right click" button as I call it) shows the list of options for most screens but the list sometimes runs off the top and bottom by just a few lines and could have been scaled down to fit them all. Would have been nice to enable the 'diagonal' buttons to be shortcuts for some of the common menu items while the menu is open.
The Interface (the most important part of any mp3 player):
It may sound like I'm pointing out a lot of flaws in the device's usability but let me assure you it really is fantastic to use. The device interface is the same as the venerable ZVM and is powerful attractive and simple. The 'right click' menus offer a lot of functionality while being intuitive to any computer user; rather than hide a cluttered pile of settings in the main menu settings screen many settings are accessed from the screen they're related to. I'm a big fan of the ZVM interface and am glad they didn't change it. On the Zen the graphics have been given quite a boost since the ZVM days and the gui really is pretty.
Useful things the Zen players do that ipod and zune do NOT under any circumstances support:
- [zune] sync with 3rd party software
- 'now playing' playlist access
- creation/saving of playlists on the fly
- ability to add a track to the 'now playing' list allows you to build a playlist and not interrupt currently playing track great for playing music for others
- bookmark track positions (great for podcasts audiobooks long music mixes)
- switch between view of albums artists or track in the music menus
- rearrange items when you customize the main menu
- "dj" menu with options like "play popular" and "play highly rated"
- delete actual tracks from within the player
- record voice
- hide photos/video easily obviously to hide porn when showing off your player to your mom
- actual usb port no proprietary connector
- built in speaker
- wifi network access
I see this player is squaring off against the ipod and zune and is already going above and beyond them both feature by feature.
PS:
Nitpicks:
- no rapid way to seek in a track
- no "go to album" or "go to genre" for a track only "go to artist"
- pageup/down buttons stop working when you move "right" to the list of letter shortcuts on a long list and they don't work on the 'right click' menu
- speaker should have been put on the left side your hand ends up covering it up sometimes when you hold it right handedlyMore detail ...
Creative Labs Zen Mozaic EZ300 8 GB MP3 Player (Black)
Design/Manufacturing Defect?
The unit shut itself off automatically while I was at the beach. The unit was in a beach bag. Thought it failed but after I got home it worked. Battery was fully charged so I knew it wasn't that. Few days later left the unit in the console of my car. When I came out after work and tried to turn it on. It wouldn't. After I got home it worked. The only common factor temperature but in neither case was the unit in the sun. The unit was warm to the touch but not hot. On another occasion the same thing happened when I left it in the car. On a whim I turned on the air conditioning and held the unit near the vent for less than a minute. It worked again! Obviously there is a very temperature sensitive component.
Returned the first unit for another one thinking there was a manufacturing defect. The second unit does the same thing. Doesn't always work at the beach; doesn't always work in the car. What good is it? Previously had a Zen V Plus. Never had a problem at the beach or in the car.
I really like the unit its controls and features but they're of no advantage if the unit doesn't function. There must be a design or component problem. It's return time again and buy the refurb Zen V Plus 4GB available here. More detail ...
Creative Zen Mozaic 4 GB MP3 Player (Black)
Great player and a great price!
I've had the Zen Mozaic 4 GB for about a week now and I love it! Here is just a short list of the pros and cons I have noticed.
Pros:
Price - It's very cost-effective for the tons of features included!
FM Radio - The radio signal strength is unimpressive but a plus nonetheless since many don't offer this feature. Note: the radio antenna is built into the headphones so with just the built-in speaker there is no radio reception at all. Headphones must be plugged in.
Alarm clock - I love being able to set the song that I wake up to and with the built-in speaker it works much like a cell-phone alarm clock.
Built-in speaker - Now you can share a song with a friend without sharing your headphones. The speaker sounds better than I thought it would considering how small the device is. I wouldn't listen to it for hours but it's a nice additional feature.
Battery Life - When they say 30+ hours they're not joking. Very impressive battery life.
Cons:
Plastic - The whole thing is made of plastic and feels somewhat toylike. Although I hesitate to call this a "con" because it feels very sturdy and well-made. If you want a metallic feel you'll have to fork out the extra money for a Zune or iPod (twice the price).
Headphones - The headphones are pretty cheap. The music sounds tinny when you use them but if you use nicer headphones sound quality is good! Once again the radio antenna is in the headphones if you want to use this feature.
My overall impression is that I am very satisfied with the product. I don't use it much for videos but the included software will convert videos to .avi format for viewing which is nice but the screen is a bit small for using it as a video player very often. I use Media Monkey for syncing but you can use Windows Media Player or simply Drag and Drop.
Audio quality is great with better headphones and the interface is simple to use. The design I think is very sleek and unique but obviously not for everyone. If you're looking for a nice little player to give as a gift or just to stash in your pocket this is a great choice! More detail ...
Creative Zen X-Fi 16 GB Video MP3 Player with Wireless LAN and Built-In Speaker (Black/Silver)
Excellent player but no fifth star until they bring back analog interface
First an introduction: Recently I've owned and used and liked an iPod 4th gen 80gb zune 80 iPod 5th gen 80gb creative zen vision: m 30gb AND 60gb versions (the holy grail to so many mp3 player fans) and I am a power user with a music library of 35gb all tagged using the free Media Monkey software. I know what I'm talking about. (If you're curious the two ipods were returned the ZVM30 was given to my cousin when I got the 60 the ZVM60 was destroyed in iraq and so was the Zune80)
Looks extremely sexy definitely on the iPod and Zune level of sexiness.
It's ridiculously lightweight and weighs just a bit more than a nano and about half as much as a harddrive bearing zune or ipod.
Video transfer/conversion does not apply to me so I will not be reviewing it.
IM chat gimmick is worthless move along.
wifi connect works and is easy to set up but there is no link to shoutcast or icecast directories. Instead creative "media box" will show up with internet access but has a very limited selection of podcast streams and almost no streaming music.
Streaming music from a local wireless network is very cool but chews up the otherwise good battery life limiting its usefulness.
SD card support is hardly seamless and has a limited set of browsing functions but this may be nitpicking as most players don't bother to include ANY expandable memory.
x-fi sounds "different" but not unanimously "better" and uses more battery not really a selling feature then
The headphones are awesome and while they're compared as worse than the zune 80's included headphones the zen's fit more comfortably (to me) and sound just as good.
The built in speaker is very cool and sounds surprisingly good for its size there is never any distortion even at maximum volume (distortion is what makes speakerphones and other bad+loud audio sources sound so horrible). It is perfect for showing a song to a friend or friends or playing a little background music in a quiet room.
No line out but using the headphone jack at full volume sounds just fine on my car stereo and home stereo with no distortion.
Software:
A lot of people complain about the Creative software but you really never need to use it except for video transfer. I use Media Monkey to sync my music and it works flawlessly. Everyone has Windows Media Player and that syncs just fine with the player. It's an MTP device and that means that a lot of different programs can sync with it. So except for video issues you really have no reason in the world to complain about the creative software.
Buttons:
The nine button grid is 4 directions and a center "select" button and on many menus and lists the diagonal four buttons act as home/end and pageup/down but on many screens they are useless. If they were customizable they could be very powerful! Faster seeking view toggles many possibilities if they were customizable. Firmware update maybe?
I have long fingers and big hands and the player is comfortable to hold but the buttons are small and indistinct you have to concentrate a little to be sure you press the correct one if you are fishing for the next/prev track or the volume up/down buttons in your pocket. The pause button is unmissable though and that is most important.
The zen vision:m's vertical slider with side to side rocking and touchpad tap for select was really perfect for an audio player and I find myself missing it a lot (but I don't miss that player's poor battery life large size or ogreish looks)
A disappointment: On no screen are the grid buttons used to refer to a specific function on a grid on the screen (which would have opened some very quick and intuitive menu options) they are ALWAYS arrow buttons with a center select and sometimes other use diagonal buttons.
Creative have dropped the ball a little by adding four new buttons and not using them to their full potential. The most notable example is that the IM chat function could have used a cell-phone style text entry but instead uses a very obtuse method that keeps the buttons as arrow keys. Once you've moved past the chat function and removed it from the main menu you'll then notice that on the 'now playing' screen the most common and important screen the four diagonal buttons don't do anything at all. :(
The customizable shortcut button is still here and still awesome easily settable by simply holding it down. It comes preset to the x-fi settings screen which should have been integrated into the EQ screen anyway. Mine is set to jump to 'now playing' perfect for changing volume or next/prev track quickly from any menu and then you can press back to return to wherever you were.
The menu button (or "right click" button as I call it) shows the list of options for most screens but the list sometimes runs off the top and bottom by just a few lines and could have been scaled down to fit them all. Would have been nice to enable the 'diagonal' buttons to be shortcuts for some of the common menu items while the menu is open.
The Interface (the most important part of any mp3 player):
It may sound like I'm pointing out a lot of flaws in the device's usability but let me assure you it really is fantastic to use. The device interface is the same as the venerable ZVM and is powerful attractive and simple. The 'right click' menus offer a lot of functionality while being intuitive to any computer user; rather than hide a cluttered pile of settings in the main menu settings screen many settings are accessed from the screen they're related to. I'm a big fan of the ZVM interface and am glad they didn't change it. On the Zen the graphics have been given quite a boost since the ZVM days and the gui really is pretty.
Useful things the Zen players do that ipod and zune do NOT under any circumstances support:
- [zune] sync with 3rd party software
- 'now playing' playlist access
- creation/saving of playlists on the fly
- ability to add a track to the 'now playing' list allows you to build a playlist and not interrupt currently playing track great for playing music for others
- bookmark track positions (great for podcasts audiobooks long music mixes)
- switch between view of albums artists or track in the music menus
- rearrange items when you customize the main menu
- "dj" menu with options like "play popular" and "play highly rated"
- delete actual tracks from within the player
- record voice
- hide photos/video easily obviously to hide porn when showing off your player to your mom
- actual usb port no proprietary connector
- built in speaker
- wifi network access
I see this player is squaring off against the ipod and zune and is already going above and beyond them both feature by feature.
PS:
Nitpicks:
- no rapid way to seek in a track
- no "go to album" or "go to genre" for a track only "go to artist"
- pageup/down buttons stop working when you move "right" to the list of letter shortcuts on a long list and they don't work on the 'right click' menu
- speaker should have been put on the left side your hand ends up covering it up sometimes when you hold it right handedlyMore detail ...
Creative Zen X-Fi 32 GB Video MP3 Player with Wireless LAN and Built-In Speaker (Black/Silver)
Excellent player but no fifth star until they bring back analog interface
First an introduction: Recently I've owned and used and liked an iPod 4th gen 80gb zune 80 iPod 5th gen 80gb creative zen vision: m 30gb AND 60gb versions (the holy grail to so many mp3 player fans) and I am a power user with a music library of 35gb all tagged using the free Media Monkey software. I know what I'm talking about. (If you're curious the two ipods were returned the ZVM30 was given to my cousin when I got the 60 the ZVM60 was destroyed in iraq and so was the Zune80)
Looks extremely sexy definitely on the iPod and Zune level of sexiness.
It's ridiculously lightweight and weighs just a bit more than a nano and about half as much as a harddrive bearing zune or ipod.
Video transfer/conversion does not apply to me so I will not be reviewing it.
IM chat gimmick is worthless move along.
wifi connect works and is easy to set up but there is no link to shoutcast or icecast directories. Instead creative "media box" will show up with internet access but has a very limited selection of podcast streams and almost no streaming music.
Streaming music from a local wireless network is very cool but chews up the otherwise good battery life limiting its usefulness.
SD card support is hardly seamless and has a limited set of browsing functions but this may be nitpicking as most players don't bother to include ANY expandable memory.
x-fi sounds "different" but not unanimously "better" and uses more battery not really a selling feature then
The headphones are awesome and while they're compared as worse than the zune 80's included headphones the zen's fit more comfortably (to me) and sound just as good.
The built in speaker is very cool and sounds surprisingly good for its size there is never any distortion even at maximum volume (distortion is what makes speakerphones and other bad+loud audio sources sound so horrible). It is perfect for showing a song to a friend or friends or playing a little background music in a quiet room.
No line out but using the headphone jack at full volume sounds just fine on my car stereo and home stereo with no distortion.
Software:
A lot of people complain about the Creative software but you really never need to use it except for video transfer. I use Media Monkey to sync my music and it works flawlessly. Everyone has Windows Media Player and that syncs just fine with the player. It's an MTP device and that means that a lot of different programs can sync with it. So except for video issues you really have no reason in the world to complain about the creative software.
Buttons:
The nine button grid is 4 directions and a center "select" button and on many menus and lists the diagonal four buttons act as home/end and pageup/down but on many screens they are useless. If they were customizable they could be very powerful! Faster seeking view toggles many possibilities if they were customizable. Firmware update maybe?
I have long fingers and big hands and the player is comfortable to hold but the buttons are small and indistinct you have to concentrate a little to be sure you press the correct one if you are fishing for the next/prev track or the volume up/down buttons in your pocket. The pause button is unmissable though and that is most important.
The zen vision:m's vertical slider with side to side rocking and touchpad tap for select was really perfect for an audio player and I find myself missing it a lot (but I don't miss that player's poor battery life large size or ogreish looks)
A disappointment: On no screen are the grid buttons used to refer to a specific function on a grid on the screen (which would have opened some very quick and intuitive menu options) they are ALWAYS arrow buttons with a center select and sometimes other use diagonal buttons.
Creative have dropped the ball a little by adding four new buttons and not using them to their full potential. The most notable example is that the IM chat function could have used a cell-phone style text entry but instead uses a very obtuse method that keeps the buttons as arrow keys. Once you've moved past the chat function and removed it from the main menu you'll then notice that on the 'now playing' screen the most common and important screen the four diagonal buttons don't do anything at all. :(
The customizable shortcut button is still here and still awesome easily settable by simply holding it down. It comes preset to the x-fi settings screen which should have been integrated into the EQ screen anyway. Mine is set to jump to 'now playing' perfect for changing volume or next/prev track quickly from any menu and then you can press back to return to wherever you were.
The menu button (or "right click" button as I call it) shows the list of options for most screens but the list sometimes runs off the top and bottom by just a few lines and could have been scaled down to fit them all. Would have been nice to enable the 'diagonal' buttons to be shortcuts for some of the common menu items while the menu is open.
The Interface (the most important part of any mp3 player):
It may sound like I'm pointing out a lot of flaws in the device's usability but let me assure you it really is fantastic to use. The device interface is the same as the venerable ZVM and is powerful attractive and simple. The 'right click' menus offer a lot of functionality while being intuitive to any computer user; rather than hide a cluttered pile of settings in the main menu settings screen many settings are accessed from the screen they're related to. I'm a big fan of the ZVM interface and am glad they didn't change it. On the Zen the graphics have been given quite a boost since the ZVM days and the gui really is pretty.
Useful things the Zen players do that ipod and zune do NOT under any circumstances support:
- [zune] sync with 3rd party software
- 'now playing' playlist access
- creation/saving of playlists on the fly
- ability to add a track to the 'now playing' list allows you to build a playlist and not interrupt currently playing track great for playing music for others
- bookmark track positions (great for podcasts audiobooks long music mixes)
- switch between view of albums artists or track in the music menus
- rearrange items when you customize the main menu
- "dj" menu with options like "play popular" and "play highly rated"
- delete actual tracks from within the player
- record voice
- hide photos/video easily obviously to hide porn when showing off your player to your mom
- actual usb port no proprietary connector
- built in speaker
- wifi network access
I see this player is squaring off against the ipod and zune and is already going above and beyond them both feature by feature.
PS:
Nitpicks:
- no rapid way to seek in a track
- no "go to album" or "go to genre" for a track only "go to artist"
- pageup/down buttons stop working when you move "right" to the list of letter shortcuts on a long list and they don't work on the 'right click' menu
- speaker should have been put on the left side your hand ends up covering it up sometimes when you hold it right handedlyMore detail ...
Creative Labs Zen X-Fi 2 16 GB MP3 and Video Player with Touchscreen and Built-In Speaker (Black and Silver)
Not Ready For Prime Time
I've owned many MP3 players incl. Creative's Muvo Zev V and Zen. What drew me to the X-Fi2 was the larger screen the video out the RSS plus the touch interface and speaker somewhat.
Display: Very pretty 400 X 240. Good quality video and images look sharp and bright.
Audio Quality: I did A/B comparisons between the Zen and the X-Fi2 and the X-Fi2 wins. The top end is smoother and the bass is tighter and deeper and the overall sound is more open. They're similar in max volume but the X-Fi2 sounds better.
X-Fi: I don't use it.
Creative Centrale: Install it then forget it.
Audio Storage: Album art is a problem. The art has to be "embedded" in the ID3 tag for it to appear it's possible Windows Media Player automatically does this. This can also be done with an app like "Mp3tag". Which meant going back and doing that to all 350 albums I had on the old Zen. Note that I don't use any services like Rhapsody or files with DRM so for me playback itself was fine.
Viewing Photos: Some jpgs don't show up except as "?" marks. Not sure why.
Videos: Nightmare. With the avi or wmv that worked fine on the Zen the audio would break up or the vids wouldn't be recognized. Creative Central was unreliable and slow and coverts vids to wmv.
I tried about 6 other converters and either audio or video was messed up or just not recognized (XVid Divx or wmv). Finally tested Handbrake and the X-Fi2 was happy playing those XVid files with very specific settings about 90% of the time. And when it works it looks great.
Video Out: Works surprisingly well but no one will think it's a DVD.
RSS: Run a sync program from the X-Fi2 when it's connected to your PC. Kind of a pain but it works.
Battery: Seems like the charging time and life are on par with the Zen.
Interface: Not easy. A quick light touch mostly doesn't work. Pressing down a larger area takes longer to process so sometimes the fingernail trick is best. And sometimes it just takes a long to to respond in general. It also misinterprets gestures frequently. But with practice it's usable.
The volume control is not immediately accessible (3 steps) on most levels and not at all from the main menu. So trying to quickly turn it down on a sunny day (hard to see the display) is almost impossible.
Trying to do things one-handed is difficult (e.g. walking to the train X-Fi2 in one hand coffee in other).
Summary: It feels that the X-Fi2 was launched before development was complete. The touch interface is quirky the video support is very finicky and the menu design needs refinement. I'm hoping further firmware updates improve things. ITMT the average user will NOT be happy.
More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen X-Fi 2 8 GB MP3 and Video Player with Touchscreen and Built-In Speaker (Black and Silver)
Not Ready For Prime Time
I've owned many MP3 players incl. Creative's Muvo Zev V and Zen. What drew me to the X-Fi2 was the larger screen the video out the RSS plus the touch interface and speaker somewhat.
Display: Very pretty 400 X 240. Good quality video and images look sharp and bright.
Audio Quality: I did A/B comparisons between the Zen and the X-Fi2 and the X-Fi2 wins. The top end is smoother and the bass is tighter and deeper and the overall sound is more open. They're similar in max volume but the X-Fi2 sounds better.
X-Fi: I don't use it.
Creative Centrale: Install it then forget it.
Audio Storage: Album art is a problem. The art has to be "embedded" in the ID3 tag for it to appear it's possible Windows Media Player automatically does this. This can also be done with an app like "Mp3tag". Which meant going back and doing that to all 350 albums I had on the old Zen. Note that I don't use any services like Rhapsody or files with DRM so for me playback itself was fine.
Viewing Photos: Some jpgs don't show up except as "?" marks. Not sure why.
Videos: Nightmare. With the avi or wmv that worked fine on the Zen the audio would break up or the vids wouldn't be recognized. Creative Central was unreliable and slow and coverts vids to wmv.
I tried about 6 other converters and either audio or video was messed up or just not recognized (XVid Divx or wmv). Finally tested Handbrake and the X-Fi2 was happy playing those XVid files with very specific settings about 90% of the time. And when it works it looks great.
Video Out: Works surprisingly well but no one will think it's a DVD.
RSS: Run a sync program from the X-Fi2 when it's connected to your PC. Kind of a pain but it works.
Battery: Seems like the charging time and life are on par with the Zen.
Interface: Not easy. A quick light touch mostly doesn't work. Pressing down a larger area takes longer to process so sometimes the fingernail trick is best. And sometimes it just takes a long to to respond in general. It also misinterprets gestures frequently. But with practice it's usable.
The volume control is not immediately accessible (3 steps) on most levels and not at all from the main menu. So trying to quickly turn it down on a sunny day (hard to see the display) is almost impossible.
Trying to do things one-handed is difficult (e.g. walking to the train X-Fi2 in one hand coffee in other).
Summary: It feels that the X-Fi2 was launched before development was complete. The touch interface is quirky the video support is very finicky and the menu design needs refinement. I'm hoping further firmware updates improve things. ITMT the average user will NOT be happy.
More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen X-Fi 2 32 GB MP3 and Video Player with Touchscreen and Built-In Speaker (Black and Silver)
Not Ready For Prime Time
I've owned many MP3 players incl. Creative's Muvo Zev V and Zen. What drew me to the X-Fi2 was the larger screen the video out the RSS plus the touch interface and speaker somewhat.
Display: Very pretty 400 X 240. Good quality video and images look sharp and bright.
Audio Quality: I did A/B comparisons between the Zen and the X-Fi2 and the X-Fi2 wins. The top end is smoother and the bass is tighter and deeper and the overall sound is more open. They're similar in max volume but the X-Fi2 sounds better.
X-Fi: I don't use it.
Creative Centrale: Install it then forget it.
Audio Storage: Album art is a problem. The art has to be "embedded" in the ID3 tag for it to appear it's possible Windows Media Player automatically does this. This can also be done with an app like "Mp3tag". Which meant going back and doing that to all 350 albums I had on the old Zen. Note that I don't use any services like Rhapsody or files with DRM so for me playback itself was fine.
Viewing Photos: Some jpgs don't show up except as "?" marks. Not sure why.
Videos: Nightmare. With the avi or wmv that worked fine on the Zen the audio would break up or the vids wouldn't be recognized. Creative Central was unreliable and slow and coverts vids to wmv.
I tried about 6 other converters and either audio or video was messed up or just not recognized (XVid Divx or wmv). Finally tested Handbrake and the X-Fi2 was happy playing those XVid files with very specific settings about 90% of the time. And when it works it looks great.
Video Out: Works surprisingly well but no one will think it's a DVD.
RSS: Run a sync program from the X-Fi2 when it's connected to your PC. Kind of a pain but it works.
Battery: Seems like the charging time and life are on par with the Zen.
Interface: Not easy. A quick light touch mostly doesn't work. Pressing down a larger area takes longer to process so sometimes the fingernail trick is best. And sometimes it just takes a long to to respond in general. It also misinterprets gestures frequently. But with practice it's usable.
The volume control is not immediately accessible (3 steps) on most levels and not at all from the main menu. So trying to quickly turn it down on a sunny day (hard to see the display) is almost impossible.
Trying to do things one-handed is difficult (e.g. walking to the train X-Fi2 in one hand coffee in other).
Summary: It feels that the X-Fi2 was launched before development was complete. The touch interface is quirky the video support is very finicky and the menu design needs refinement. I'm hoping further firmware updates improve things. ITMT the average user will NOT be happy.
More detail ...
Creative Zen Mozaic 16 GB MP3 Player (Black)
Fantastic Little Player - Love the Speaker
I purchased this to replace my 4 gb Zen Plus. Still works great but I really wanted more capacity. I use them mainly at the gym when working out and on airplanes during travel.
The player itself is great. As other said the buttons get take a little time to get used to but once you do it's great. Sound and battery life are excellent.
The only con as others have said is the HORRIBLE Centrale software. It works terribly on my Vista 64 computer - very slow seems to freeze up. It is useless - I can't believe Creative released this crappy software. I never had a problem with the software that came with my Zen V Plus but this software was horrible. I uninstalled it and was going to return the player but decided to try and use Windows Media Player for syncing music. What I found was that you can use Windows Media Player to sync music and create playlists. It works beautifully and quickly and transferred my many playlists perfectly.
All in all I couldn't be happier.
Update: 5/22/09
I reiterate the 5 stars I gave this player after using it daily for the past couple of months. I find I use the speaker much more than I thought I would and really love it. Sounds great for the size. The 16 gb capacity is amazing - I have still not managed to fill it up. I love the way I can create my playlists on windows media player (I have one for rock one for running one for classical etc) and have it easily sync with the Mozaic. Battery life is amazing and the sound is great. Durabilty is excellent as I have dropped it several times while on the treadmill and it still looks and works fine. More detail ...
Creative Zen MX 8 GB Video MP3 Player (Black)
cheaper version of the old Zen: mixed results
I have both the older 8gb Zen (2007) and a new 16gb Zen MX. They are basically the same except that the MX has integrated access to the removable SD card directly from the Creative Centrale software that comes with the it. With the old Zen you had to go into a removable card menu on the Zen and then access the card via the computer operating system to add or delete files. Zen MX also does not have the code for some video formats and the software has to convert them before transfer to the Zen MX; on the old Zen you could just transfer the video files directly to the Zen. Finally the Creative Centrale software that comes with the new Zen MX does not seem as intuitive and user friendly as the older software that came with the Zen. If I had to do it again I would have bought the older Zen rather than the new Zen MX but the older ones are becoming hard to find and are a lot more expensive. Strangely enough the 16gb version of the old Zen is more expensive than the 32gb version!
To answer those who said the Zen MX will not play DRM protected files. Not true. It will play DRM9 protected files but they have to be put on the Zen via the transfer function in the software not through drag & drop because the former also carries over the license info and the latter technique does not. Creative notes this on their web site.More detail ...
Creative Labs Zen MX 16 GB MP3 Player (Black)
cheaper version of the old Zen: mixed results
I have both the older 8gb Zen (2007) and a new 16gb Zen MX. They are basically the same except that the MX has integrated access to the removable SD card directly from the Creative Centrale software that comes with the it. With the old Zen you had to go into a removable card menu on the Zen and then access the card via the computer operating system to add or delete files. Zen MX also does not have the code for some video formats and the software has to convert them before transfer to the Zen MX; on the old Zen you could just transfer the video files directly to the Zen. Finally the Creative Centrale software that comes with the new Zen MX does not seem as intuitive and user friendly as the older software that came with the Zen. If I had to do it again I would have bought the older Zen rather than the new Zen MX but the older ones are becoming hard to find and are a lot more expensive. Strangely enough the 16gb version of the old Zen is more expensive than the 32gb version!
To answer those who said the Zen MX will not play DRM protected files. Not true. It will play DRM9 protected files but they have to be put on the Zen via the transfer function in the software not through drag & drop because the former also carries over the license info and the latter technique does not. Creative notes this on their web site.More detail ...
Creative Zen 32 GB Portable Media Player (Black)
Best flash player on the market great even for large music collections
This is a great choice for those people who previously limited their flash players to workout duty or only holding a small piece of their large music collection and having to change the music on it every so often. With a 16GB capacity most people can fit their entire collection on here without difficulty and even have room for some videos.
First impressions of this player are very good. It is extremely appealing to the eye everyone who sees it will ask about it. It is about the size of a credit card just thicker (less than 1/2inch). The front is a very glossy black plastic that looks great until you touch it instantly covering it with fingerprints :) The back is a rough cheaper feeling black plastic. Overall it has a nice solid weight and feel to it but not very heavy. This will easily fit in a pocket.
The 2.5" screen is absolutely gorgeous. Very bright with vivid colors. The viewing angle is very good two people can easily look at the screen at the same time while watching a movie for example. The menus are all nicely animated and intuitive to navigate. The icons and text are big clear and easy to read.
One of the big perks to having so much capacity is plenty of room for videos. This was one of the first things I've tested as it was a big reason for my purchase. First of all it DOES play Amazon Unbox videos perfectly. Transferring files was very easy (just a few clicks) and very quick. The quality of the video was great as well. The max size of videos is apparently 320x240 I have not been able to get it to play anything larger than that. If the video is smaller (for example widescreen) you have the option of playing it at the correct aspect ratio or fill the screen (stretched out). I've gotten it to play videos encoded in Xvid and WMV format. Xvid files were encoded with AutoGK and the WMV files were encoded with Arcsoft MediaConverter. If you synchronize with Windows Media Player you can put in *almost any* video file and it will automatically convert the file into WMV format and then transfer to the player. How long it takes to convert depends on the type of video you're encoding how big the file is and of course the speed of your computer.
Music sounds very good on this player but please... get rid of the stock headphones they are horrible. Using a decent pair of headphones makes a HUGE difference. The EQ options are OK there are about a half dozen presets and a customizable EQ. The "Bass Boost" option just made it worse in my opinion it just distorted the sound. Otherwise it is a very even and balanced sound very similar to the Vision:M.
The FM radio has a whopping 32 presets and the reception is pretty good. Strong stations are in stereo weaker ones come in mono. I haven't had a chance to test out the built-in mic.
I easily transferred music and playlists onto this player from Windows Media Player and MediaMonkey as well as protected music (WMA) from Napster. Everything was very easy usually just dragging and dropping. The speed of transfer is probably the fastest I've seen. I've used this player on XP Home and on Vista Premium 64-bit.
Regarding the SD cards. I think its only a slight inconvenience that the memory card media isn't directly integrated with the other content. Meaning if you have videos on the SD card you don't go to the "Video" menu where all the other videos are you have to access them through the "Memory Card" menu. Once there you browse through the file structure like normal. If you organize the content smartly on your cards you should have no problem. And really its a small price to pay for that feature. Currently SDHC cards are up to 16GB in capacity meaning you could double the capacity and carry around 32GB worth of content in your pocket. Amazing. I tested a Kingston 512MB SD Card and a Kingston 2GB microSD card (with adapter of course) and they were recognized and played the content without difficulty.
A quick note about the firmware. Mine came with 1.10.05. When my player turns off it really turns off. With newer firmwares when it turns off it goes into a sleep mode for a while before it finally turns all the way off. What that means is with the older firmware each time you turn it on it has to "boot" all over again whereas with the newer firmware you get an "instant-on" at the expense of slightly reduced battery life (since it is asleep and not off). Something to consider before you decide to upgrade the firmware.More detail ...
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