*********** BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE  ***********
On 30/12/2004 at 1:46 PM Barbara! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
AFB Accessworld
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Product Evaluation: On the Move with MuVo
By Deborah Kendrick
Do you like to have a book or magazine to listen to while you ride the
train 
to work,
fold laundry, or work out on a treadmill? Do you sometimes have trouble

choosing
between carrying a sound recording of the latest romance novel and the
music 
by your
favorite band? Technology has certainly made many things possible that
were 
once
impossible for people who are blind, but a definite drawback has been
the 
amount
of poundage carried on even a brief commute. Thus, for its size and 
simplicity alone,
the MuVo portable audio player from Creative Technology commands
attention.
The MuVo is similar in shape and size to a pack of chewing gum or a 
disposable lighter.
In other words, it could sit in a shirt pocket with plenty of room to
spare! 
The
MuVo weighs just slightly more than 1 ounce, so it can be worn around
the 
neck and
barely be noticed.
Caption: The MuVo's tiny size is a primary advantage.
The MuVo I tested has 128 MB of space for you to store your
files-whether 
they are
MP3, WMA, or the proprietary format produced by Audible.com (a
commercial 
online
supplier of audio books and programs). For example, the unit I
experimented 
with
arrived with a track of brief instructions, a promotional sampling of 
products (books,
magazines, and radio broadcasts) available from Audible.com, and the 
complete recording
of Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code. From my personal computer, I
then 
added about
a half dozen songs (some WMA and some MP3 files) and, just to see how
it 
would sound,
converted a book from Web-Braille to an MP3 file using a Kurzweil 1000
and 
loaded
some of the chapters in the MuVo.
All that transferring, incidentally, took about 15 minutes, and a
portion
of 
that
time was spent browsing Web-Braille, choosing a book, downloading it, 
creating the
MP3 files, and wandering around my music folder to pick fun files to
copy
to 
MuVo.
The sound quality ranged from good to excellent, with plenty of volume.
I 
listened
to the MuVo only through its stereo earbuds, but it can be connected to
a 
set of
speakers as well.
Driving MuVo
The MuVo has six small, but readily discernible, buttons that are
arranged 
in two
rows of three along one long edge of the device. The top row has a 
Play/Pause button,
a button for moving forward, and a button for moving back. The bottom
row 
has a Volume
Up button, a Volume Down button, and a Repeat button (which is actually
used 
for
several functions.) To begin listening, you press the Play/Pause button
for 
about
five seconds. To pause, press the same button briefly, and to stop play

altogether,
hold the same button again for five seconds. (If neglected for a few 
minutes, MuVo
powers itself off.)
To cycle through the tracks, press the Repeat button once and then use
the 
Forward
or Back buttons to move from file to file. When you have found the file
you 
want,
press Repeat again. If you stop in the middle of a file, MuVo will pick
up 
where
you left off when you turn it on again. The only other tactile
occurrences 
on the
unit are the jack for earbuds or speakers and a notch through which a
neck 
cord can
be threaded.
Transferring Files
As small as it is, the MuVo has two distinct halves. Just pull it
apart,
and 
you
hold the AAA battery pack in one hand and the "guts" of the player in
the 
other,
where the USB (universal serial bus) port is located on the inside
edge.
To 
transfer
files, simply plug the latter half of the unit into your PC's USB port.

Windows Explorer
then shows the MuVo as a generic drive (probably E or F, depending on
how 
your PC
is set up), and files are easily manipulated as with any other drive.
Simply 
select
the files you want to put in the MuVo, copy them, and paste them to the

drive where
MuVo is connected. Snap MuVo's halves back together, and you're ready
to
go.
Caption: MuVo pulls apart into two halves to remove the battery pack
and 
upload files.
MuVo can be purchased at some discount and online stores-Wal-Mart
<
http://www.walmart.com
, Target <
http://www.target.com
, or Amazon.com <
http://www.amazon.com>-for
less than $100. Audible.com is currently offering it free with a
12-month 
commitment
to the Basic AudibleListener plan. If you are not familiar with
Audible.com, 
it is
an online commercial service offering more than 23,000 books, several 
magazines,
and popular radio broadcasts for sale. These are commercially recorded 
human-voice
productions, the same ones you would find on the audiocassettes or CDs
that 
you can
purchase at a local bookstore. The basic plan costs $9.95 per month and

entitles
you to one book and one magazine or program each month. If you get the
MuVo 
from
Audible.com, Audible's proprietary software for transferring files to
the 
MuVo will
be included with the MuVo, plus its accompanying earbuds, extra battery

pack, and
cassette adapter.
The Bottom Line
A more complex version of MuVo is also available with more memory and
for 
more money.
The 256 MB model has an LCD (liquid crystal display) and a dictation
option, 
but
it was not evaluated for ease of use by people who are visually
impaired. 
There is
no display on the 128 MB MuVo. Its only visual indicator is a light
that 
flashes
red or green and is not essential for the smooth operation of the
device. 
For its
price, simplicity, and delivery of sound, the MuVo 128 is an excellent 
product to
put in your pocket.
Product Information
Product: MuVo
Manufacturer: Creative Technology; U.S. headquarters: Creative Labs,
1901 
McCarthy
Boulevard, Milpitas, CA 95035; phone: 408-428-6600 or 800-998-1000; web

site: <us.creative.com>.
Price: Available from discount and online stores for less than $100. 
Audible.com
<
www.audible.com
is currently offering it free with a 12-month commitment to the Basic 
AudibleListener
plan. 
*********** END FORWARDED MESSAGE  ***********

Regards Steve,
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Skype:  steve1963
MSN Messenger:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


_______________________________________________
PC-Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
http://www.pc-audio.org

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to