Let's get to the point: The most significant aspect of the Nomad Jukebox is it holds 6GB of music. This means that you can take about 1,000 songs with you wherever you go, in a device that's the size and shape of a portable CD player. When you add the fact that it records live audio directly to stereo WAV files, it's pretty easy to see why I've been dying to get my hands on one of these ever since I heard about them. It's not the perfect music machine, but it's close.
Like the Remote Solution Personal Jukebox before it, the Nomad Jukebox uses a hard drive for storage, as opposed to other, smaller portable audio players that use flash memory (which is notoriously expensive per megabyte). If you own 150 CDs or less, you'll be able to have all of your music with you at all times. The ability to efficiently navigate your collection takes on new importance with such a massive volume of songs. Luckily, the Nomad Jukebox attacks this problem on multiple fronts. You can browse music by genre, artist, or album, as well as searching for a specific song by name. It collects this information from the ID3 tags that are attached to most MP3s. When you rip CDs to the Jukebox, this information gets added via the CDDB database, but with many MP3s downloaded from the Internet, you'll need to add the ID3 tag yourself. Just right-click a song in the software to add this info manually.
The sound quality is just excellant but because of it's size you just won't be able to jog around wih it!
At $500, the Nomad Jukebox (also available in blue) is no bargain. Nonetheless, I highly recommend it to anyone who has tons of MP3s that they want to be able to hear wherever they go. And for people who like to record live audio, the Nomad Jukebox is a godsend.
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