I recently got my hands on the Vidego28—a 4GB touch screen MP4 player. It’s priced at just about $70, and 4GB at that price with touch screen technology makes this product practically fly off the shelves at eWiz. Demand for this thing has been so high in the past couple months and I wanted to see what all the fuss was about. So I snuck into inventory and pilfered one to review. Here’s what I found: +Design & Build: It feels like a good strong product and it’s much smaller than I thought it would be. It’s about 3.5” tall, 2” wide, and about 0.5” thick. It’s a really good size actually, perfect for pockets and stuff and much smaller and more portable than the Apple Touch. The build is really sturdy—it feels like if I dropped it, it would be fine so that’s nice. There’s three dedicated buttons on the bottom, 2 to control volume, and one to go back to the Menu screen. The touch screen is a tiny bit less than 2.5” by 1.8”. And it’s pretty light. Not too light to the point where it feels cheap, but light enough not to weigh your pants down. I was really impressed with this build as it feels much more expensive than it really is. -User-Friendliness: This thing is only slightly user friendly. It’s easy to start up, and the menu screen is easy enough to navigate through, but figuring out where to find your files, manage your files, and delete your files are all slightly difficult tasks to figure out. I read through the instruction manual, but it isn’t helpful at all, quite frankly. It takes time to figure out where the device is storing all your recordings—it takes time to understand the logic to this thing. When the menu first pops up, it looks extremely similar to the iPhone’s Menu screen. Apart from the menu screen, all other screens are incredibly poorly constructed and cheap looking. Deleting things took forever to figure out. When you figure out how to select an item to delete, a “Delete?” screen pops up, you have to touch the up and down arrows to highlight Yes or No, instead of just being able to touch Yes or No. And the instruction booklet does not tell you this, among other things. I made a bookmark in my e-book, and I never figured out how to delete it. So, this thing takes some getting used to. Definitely not as intuitive as I wanted it to be. -Touch Screen: Not as cool as you were expecting. It’s semi-responsive, meaning it felt me about 80% of the time. I found myself poking at it over and over, however, because loading time on this player is incredibly slow sometimes. It takes up to a good 2 seconds AFTER touching the screen before the player responds. When deleting items, it can take up to 5-7 seconds to actually get this thing to delete a file. And 4 seconds to load a photo. I must admit, I found myself incredibly frustrated after playing with this thing for awhile because sometimes the touch screen wouldn’t feel me, or it would take a long time to respond, or both. It is a touch screen and they do equip you with a Stylus, but it doesn’t help much. It’s responsive to your finger just as much as the Stylus. The slow response and the fact that it tends to lock up when you delete things kinda got on my nerves though. Once you get the hang of it, however, the player becomes a lot more fun. It just takes awhile to adjust to the time it takes to process your commands. You also can't skip around in a song. You can only skip the entire song, or replay the entire song. All in all, the operating system shows some pretty FOB signs, but it works. Another thing is that when you play any media, music or video, you press the Pause button. And then the media starts to play, the Pause button becomes the Play button, so if you want to pause the media, you have to press Play. Confused? I was too. Basically, they just got the buttons backwards, normally, you’d press the play button and while the media plays, the play button becomes a pause button. Again, all endemic of some pretty bad localization skills on the part of Super Talent. +Battery Life: -Accessories: The box comes with a charger, USB cable, earphones, stylus, cleathing cloth, a velvet pouch that looks like it should belong to a fairy or wizard, installation CD, and a user manual, which you might as well throw away. A big con is that there isn’t anywhere to put your stylus. Unless of course you carry this thing around in your fairy velvet pouch. Seriously. It doesn’t attach to the player at all. You’d just have to carry it around separately. PROS: The Price. A little over $70 for a 4GB media player. The build. It looks cool, it’s sturdy, the design looks like a dumbed-down version of the Apple touch. It’s highly portable because of that. Menu screen also looks awesome. I love the speakers and the fact that it can play music pretty loud without the earphones. The video quality was also pretty good, relative to the price, battery life was outstanding, and it comes with plenty of features.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Product Review: Super Talent Vidego28 MP4 Player
Labels:
ewiz,
mp3 player,
mp4,
MP4_2801K4,
music,
review,
super talent,
touch screen,
vidego28
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1 comments:
Your wrong about the dropping it part, I dropped mine and now its busted....these things are crap.
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