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Rating: Summary: Product - Value Review: Great CD Player. If you are looking for an alternative to G-Protection by Sony, this is it. With 45 seconds ESP (the third generation of it's kind). You will pay $... or more (almost 4 CD's of your favorites) for the same functions and a remote on the headphones (lazy people who can't look at their machine).Features: It reads CD-RW, Standar 1 bit digital to analog converter, Digital dynamic bass boost, standard programming (Intro scan, Shuffle play, Repeat 1, all, program, shuffle, scan), resume and hold. On the cons: every machine of this kind needs a carrying case if they want to be call a portable.
Rating: Summary: MP3? Review: I was informed in the Technical Information that This Product could so read MP3's. I have so far burned and ruined alot of cd's because of this. I kept trying to change things to get the player to read them. The PHILLIP's cd player is not MP3 compatible. I was told by Amazon.com that It was indeed MP3 compatible. Therefor I do not recommend this cd player if you think it plays MP3's. Otherwise the cd player is great but the volume is not so great.
Rating: Summary: MP3? Review: The manual does not mention anything about requirements for burning MP3 CDs so the player can read them. Perhaps the technical specifications for directory structure and file naming conventions are assumed to be common knowledge or self intuitive. I doubt anyone could guess which bitrates are supported. No indication of media requirements either. Will a "data" CD with music burned to it in audio format work? (It does) My research led me to Philips' customer care line (1.800.531.0039), where I was politely informed (in Ebonics) that MP3 compatibility is not listed as an included feature on this or any AZ model. It says MP3 compatible right on the package. Is this a case of false advertisement?
Rating: Summary: MP3 Compatable? Review: The manual does not mention anything about requirements for burning MP3 CDs so the player can read them. Perhaps the technical specifications for directory structure and file naming conventions are assumed to be common knowledge or self intuitive. I doubt anyone could guess which bitrates are supported. No indication of media requirements either. Will a "data" CD with music burned to it in audio format work? (It does) My research led me to Philips' customer care line (1.800.531.0039), where I was politely informed (in Ebonics) that MP3 compatibility is not listed as an included feature on this or any AZ model. It says MP3 compatible right on the package. Is this a case of false advertisement?
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