Make Ogg Portable 15
A reader writes: "Taken from a post on http://www.hydrogenaudio.org
"I got help from the fine folks over at the Gentoo forum to find you. I have been talking with jazPiper, one of the makers of portable MP3-players, and they was very interested in getting support for Ogg Vorbis. However, they had trouble finding a user base for this product. I will of course point their attention to these forums, but I hope you will help me convincing them by signing the petition, saying support for Ogg Vorbis in a portable device makes it more attractive.
So please go here and sign it!"
Another petition to sign!"
Just make them look (Score:2)
Not enough information (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, is this going to cost more than a Zaurus?
I'd probably get one if it was less than $200, but probably wouldn't if it were more than $300. The features certainly play a role -- is this CD-based? Flash-based? HD-based? What kind of interface? Do we get Linux mass storage device support for uploading music?
These are pretty critical.
I can say that I'd be more inclined to buy a vorbis than an mp3 player.
Re:Not enough information (Score:2)
Last time I was in the market for a portable player, there were these cute little flash based systems that had 32MB of storage. This is simply not enough to bother with ripping and downloading to make it worthwhile. With ogg you probably could get a whole CD down to one of these things at reasonable quality. I'd definitely spring for a tiny ogg player with 64MB of storage.
Re:Not enough information (Score:1)
Average filesize: 1.6 MB.
Total Archive Size: 537
Number Of Files: 344
(And yes, this is all stuff I have purchased NOT dowloaded:)
too much storage is never enough! (Score:1)
Depends what 'plenty' is
Especially in the car, the more the merrier -- I'd like have as many hours of reasonably high-quality sound as I can on a single CD-R. You're right that it's even more crucial when storage space is small to start with, but I'd like (for instance) to be able to use ogg files (all on one CD-R) rather than cassette tapes when I listen to endless episodes of CarTalk or whatever. Audiobooks, too -- some of them run very long, and the fewer disks involved, the better.
timothy
Weak Market ... (Score:2)
If you figure that
The market might build over time, but by then the company owuld probably have gone under. They should save their money until ogg is at least as big as quicktime or avi.
C'mon, just 200 signatures? (Score:2)
I know the
Ogg on Consumer Electronic (Score:1)
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Stefan
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inclusion of ogg, not exclusion of [x] (Score:1)
And contrary to a few of the other comments here already, this doesn't mean "basing one's business on Ogg" -- it just means making it an available feature. If no one ever uses it, it would be a bad idea, but it would disable any other features already inherent to a given device. That is, an MP3 player with ogg capability added in (from iRiver?!
Considering all the little-used formats which seem to be crammed into the chips on even the lowest-grade DVD players (percentage wise, not that many people use VCD/SVCD, and I'll bet heavily that most people's MP3-capable DVD players have never been used for that purpose), adding ogg seems like a no-brainer.
Even if it's only included to make the feature list look better, I'll take it!
timothy
self-reply, hit Submit too fast! (Score:1)
Sigh.
timothy
Iriver.com (Score:2)
Iriver seems to be working with emmett of Xiph.org to add Ogg support to their products.
BTW, the Slim-X rocks.
Grammar (Score:1)
(btw: 6 intentional mistakes)