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Creative Labs MUVO? X-Trainer 512 MB MP3 Player

Creative Labs MUVO? X-Trainer 512 MB MP3 Player

List Price: $269.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Creative Labs Muvo^2 512 MB X-Trainer
Review: I can't compare this product to other MP3 players since this is the first one I have owned. I wanted something with decent sound and storage capacity that I could also run with. So far I think it is great! It was absolutely easy to get started with it. Files download quickly and seamlessly. The sound is crisp and clean, maybe a bit on the bright side and lacking a bit of bass. But for a device smaller than a deck of playing cards I think it is rather awesome. Of course the headphones included with the device are pretty sub-standard. It sounds better with the cheap headphones that came with a Sony Walkman and I am sure really good headphones would sound even better. An all-around rave, so far.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great sound and file transfer functionality.
Review: I just received my unit today and I am very satisfied with the purchase. The muvo2 sounds better than my previous iAudio unit, which in turn sounded better than an iriver unit I purchased (and then returned). The best part is the easy file transfer to/from the unit. It shows up as a removable drive (in windows anyways) and transfer has been flawless. Much better than the iriver, which bombed fairly frequently during downloads.

The only downside to this unit is the tiny navigation buttons (otherwise it would be 5 stars). They are pretty tough to use while jogging, etc. Other than that, this is a very nice MP3 player. Oh yeah, and get some decent earphones. I recommend the koss sport clips for running, and the Etymotic phones for serious listening.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great sound and file transfer functionality.
Review: I just received my unit today and I am very satisfied with the purchase. The muvo2 sounds better than my previous iAudio unit, which in turn sounded better than an iriver unit I purchased (and then returned). The best part is the easy file transfer to/from the unit. It shows up as a removable drive (in windows anyways) and transfer has been flawless. Much better than the iriver, which bombed fairly frequently during downloads.

The only downside to this unit is the tiny navigation buttons (otherwise it would be 5 stars). They are pretty tough to use while jogging, etc. Other than that, this is a very nice MP3 player. Oh yeah, and get some decent earphones. I recommend the koss sport clips for running, and the Etymotic phones for serious listening.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Disappointed
Review: I owned several memory-, CD-, and HD-based MP3/WMAplayers and honestly I don't know why I get this Muvo2 player. There are simply too many thing that I don't like about this player

1. The control is way too small (less than 1/2" in diameter with 5 functions)

2. The navigation sucks -
a. You can't choose a song directly w/o playing a folder and then advance to the song you want.
b. You can't back out of a folder w/o going through menu | folder option | 1st folder | next/prev folder...
c. Only 2/3 functions of the tiny control wheel is available for navigation.

3. They want you to buy additional battery for $50 instead of using standard batteries.

4. The control wheel and play buttons are completely hidden when the unit is in the case so you have to take the unit out before you can control it.

5. The USB 2.0 and USB charging support are nice. However, you can't use the player in the USB charging mode.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: its our first
Review: I picked this for no moving parts, and easy interface with windows XP. So far, So Good, we use it while out on the ATV's. Ease of use for us is just fine, yea, wish it had more memory, Yea, regular batteries would be nice, but ease of getting MP3's onto it is great, hit play, and enjoy....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I Rate It At 4.75 Stars
Review: I received the X-Trainer a week ago and, so far, so good.

I purchased this device to use while exercising, not to store my entire music collection. The 512MB flash memory gives me enough space for 5 or 6 albums recorded at 128kbps, which provides fine fidelity. If you want a large storage volume and are not worried about moving parts, take your chances with a hard-disk drive unit.

The earphones are functional if not particularly comfortable. The sports armband is secure and the lithium battery arrived charged and ready to use. The control buttons are simple and easy to use and the LCD display is easily read even with my tired, old eyes. The software provided works well with my Windows XP operating system and moving files back and forth is very simple.

My only complaint is that the X-Trainer wants to replay album tracks by the title of the song rather than the track number. I'm sure there must be a simple solution for this problem but the instruction manual, provided on the CD, is not very helpful. I've tried to find a solution to this small annoyance but to no avail. A simple if cumbersome work-around is to manually retitle each track using an alpha prefix (a_NAME, b_NAME, c_NAME, etc.) in order to hear tracks in the order I want.

Apart from this one small problem, I give the X-Trainer a strong recommendation to musically-inclined exercise buffs!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Dead after 4 days...
Review: Overall a good piece, superb sound quality... however, stopped working on my way to school, no idea why and can't boot it anymore... Maybe just my bad luck, but I did enjoy it for the 4 days...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Muvo2 X-Trainer 512Mb
Review: Overall opinion:
Would I buy it again? Definitely! Fantastic little player. Best solid state on the market currently.

Pros:
Great clarity, good solid feel, fantastic design (clean and simple), Excellent capacity options considering other players on the market average around 64-256mb), solid state memory definitely a plus. Can recharge through USB or DC adaptor. USB2.0 for fast transfers. Backlighting good idea. Fast playing/startup. Good volume (with earphones).

Cons:
Buttons a bit small - can be difficult to operate when exercising. While sound clarity is fantastic, bass is lacking a little. LCD display is really cool, but maybe not 'glance' friendly. Belt-clip accessory is a bit cheap and plastically (wheres the nice leather/vinyl pouch? or at least they could colour code it?) but ultimately very functional and robust. They dont sell it in Australia yet! (took me a month to order from U.S).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: solid-state of the art
Review: pros: usb2 for fast transfers, very good sound quality, ergonomic controls, flash memory is more reliable than harddrive and uses less battery life.

cons: 100-150 song capacity (depending on quality) may not be enough for some people. Susceptible to static electricity -- so far this hasn't caused lasting effects, but it's surprising.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Comparison to iPod is asinine
Review: The guy comparing this to an iPod is clueless. For a solid-state player that you don't have to worry about wearing out under extreme jostling (I've RMA'd my iPod twice; for every "I jog with my iPod" story there are 3 of me), this is the ultimate. Besides having a player you can actually do something besides ride the bus with and expect it to last a few years, this player also has plug-and-play ability, which cannot be overstated.

Plug it in to any Win-XP (2000 also?) computer (no installation necessary) and drag the mp3/wma files over to drive E (or whatever drive it shows up as). Need to move a Word file somewhere to print it or share with a friend? Copy it over, it's just like a portable HD or giant floppy. Like your friends mp3s or vice-versa? Just plug into his computer and copy off or onto your Muvo. No need to install a bunch of proprietary software just to load your player. And USB 2.0 means the copies are nearly as fast as copying to another folder on your HD.

This is the ultimate mp3 player I've seen for active people who need something besides a HD-based player. For that matter, people who realise that even a well-treated HD player like the iPod is not likely to last more than 4-5 years can look at this as a long-term investment.

It's a bit expensive, but the only downsides I have seen so far is that the buttons are a little small for people with large fingers and it only offers FM radio with a $60 remote which requires a firmware upgrade that hasn't been released yet. And the lcd is a little small, but it shows what you need to see I guess.

Besides all that, if you want to jump on the iPod bandwagon then knock yourself out. If you want a super-slick PnP solid-state player, you can't do much better than this.


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