Showing posts with label purple alarm clock radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purple alarm clock radio. Show all posts

iSound DreamTime Pro FM Clock Radio (Pink)

iSound DreamTime Pro FM Clock Radio
  • Play and Charge your iPhone or iPod
  • Clock syncs with iPhone clock
  • AUX input for other music devices
  • Digital FM radio with 20 presets
  • Dimmer button for LCD screen

This clock is great. A great color for my teenage daughter and just the right size for her dresser. I really like the fact that it charges her iphone as well. A good buy.

Buy iSound DreamTime Pro FM Clock Radio (Pink) Now

Looks good and sound quality fairly good for size. My 6 yo daughter loved the way it looked and the hot pink color.

However, 12/24 hr. switch on back of clock did not function properly and clock only kept military time.

Also, when playing music from ipod, the music would just stop and cut in and out. Had difficulty playing ipod 4 touch music continuously.

Despite description stating that it was compatible with ipod 4 itouch, the ipod would show "this device not compatible".

Has potential but there are bugs present so beware.

I am returning.

Sony Ericsson W810i Unlocked Cell Phone with 2 MP Camera, MP3/Video Player, Memory Stick Duo--Intern

Sony Ericsson W810i Unlocked Cell Phone with 2 MP Camera, MP3/Video Player, Memory Stick Duo--International Version with No WarrantyMy previous phone was a Nokia 6600. It had a slow interface for 2006 and come on, I wanted to try somethingn new.Initially, I had planned on exploring my chances of buying a Treo but due to the rates, I gave up my plan. Without much pondering, I went and purchased a Sony Ericsson W810i. Now, it's been four weeks. Let me just give you a brief run thru of features, pros and cons.

Features

1. This phone is an mp3 player. This phone is a torch/semi flash light(with an SOS signal that can be configured). This phone has flash capability and further doubles up into a digital camera. Overall, it saves a lot of space to use this phone instead of just going out with a standalone mp3 player or/and a digital camera

2. The interface is fast. It takes around 8 seconds to get an auto focus and click a picture using the camera. I'll try and explain to come out of the screensaver you need half a second, to activate camera using the shortcut it takes 3 seconds, a further 2 seconds for auto focus and an additional 1 second to click you picture. Overall,8 seconds to click one image.You can browse thru pictures very quickly. It's around 7 times faster than my Nokia. Images can be clicked in sepia, black and white, solarise(kinda yellowey), negative and normal modes. Brightness can be reduced within the click of a button. I noticed grains on images of larger size. I don't recommend using the flash camera unless you really must. Plus while clicking a video, the light goes on and off, if the flash light is turned on.

3. The build quality on the phone is both good and bad. I love the keypad and it is a major improvement from the 800i and sundry walkman phones. It took me three days to get used to the keypad. The dictionary like function on the phone keeps a track of all the words you spell. So they're definitely there the next time around. The front of the phone seems to appear too plastic. Especially the silver scroll keys and sometimes can make your phone look like a dummy piece. The sound speakers are situated on the backside of the phone and can be used conveniently even when the phone is upside down. You can insert your memory stick pro cards even when the phone is switched on. There is NO CAMERA SHUTTER like the previous installment of this phone (800i) The power button is placed most effectively just like the volume buttons on the right side of the phone which can be used for a host number of features.

4. The internal memory of this phone is 22mb and the accompanied card contains 512mb worth of memory. The usable memory,however, is only 431mb. Upon connecting to the pc, both are instantly recognized and act as removable drives on the "my computer" icon. The accompanied software is almost brilliant. I loved "Disc2phone" and there is so much more I keep discovering about the other programs. Despite lacking an English Manual, I found I didnt need one because I don't know too many people who would buy a sony ericsson phone and not be techies in their own rights who like to configure things on their own.

5. The bundled earphones are sublime. I cannot beleive the sound on these. They cancel all the noises in a room and it's a pleasure listening to beethoven playing away or Enya's mesmerising voice or even Tool's prog metal for that matter. The speakers are satisfactory and could have been louder. If used as a stand alone mp3 player with earphones, the phone would stand for around 6-7 hours.Playing the music without using earphones can eat up battery depending on the volumes of course. It supports m4a, mp3 and aac formats(and a few other formats)

6. The messages memory of the phone is limited to around 150+ messages and that is a big blunder. Despite having a 512mb of external storage the phone cannot accommodate a mere 200 messages. The size of notes is limited and you need to make a second note to carry on. Bluetooth transfers to Samsung,Nokia phones runs at 20kbps while it's a consistent 40kbps for Sony Ericsson phones. Very good for transferring media.

Pros

It can be called an ipod replacement. I don't use mine quarter as much as I used to. This is owing to the absolutely brilliant earphones that sit within your ear and help you celebrate your time.

I love how the phone slides into a digital camera. Good build quality for the particular feature.

Good standby, saves battery, easy to work with 50% brightness. Even when I reduce brightness from 100% to 50% (lowest possible) there is hardly any noticeable difference on the screen. The keypad is much lighter but that's hardly noticeable.

Fast processor, super graphics and wallpaper options, includes a good browser, calendar, good default themes

The accompanied torch can be used to change a flat tire and can be switched on for 25mins even when the remaining battery is only 15%. (tried and tested)

Good keypad(KEY FEATURE), good playlist configuring options

Excellent software for the phone, mp3s can transferred at variable bit-rates without taking too long

Excellent,fast log, the phones keeps track off the last ten numbers you've messaged and keeps them around for easy usage

It's easy to store numbers cause the phone prompts to save numbers when a call from an unknown number ends

Great handsfree

There is a memory stick converter (The longer ones used in cameras) and that is a handy thing

The MACRO mode helps in copying handwritten/type written documents using the camera

Cons

too plastic, looks a bit boring too soon, screen can be scratched if no touchscreen is present

the accompanied tones for messages is sad, the message memory is very limite (Big DEMERIT) and the size of a note is limited

Call quality is not as good as can be

sometimes it takes over a minute for the phone to recognize it has been plugged into a USB slot

the accompanied FM radio needs to be in place to avoid screechiness in sound and proper volume

Even though the phone provides 512mb worth of external memory, only 431mb is useable. Ideally, i'd have liked a one gig card so I could have doubled on my usage.

Not enough upgradations over the W800i. People can settle for that phone because it has a slightly better talk life

IT HAS NO ENGLISH MANUAL

noticeable grains on 2megapixel images

Conclusion,

All though I am very happy with this phone, I cant help but throw a fit over the limited message storage, you can save messages onto your pc but come on, who's gonna do that?

Buy this phone if you like what you read. Not enough reasons to upgrade for 800i owners. BUT this phone has more appeal than 800i and has better more smooth graphics. There is a much better display and there is an improvement of 25% which I just noticed.However, unlike the 550i , there are no three way speakers and that makes "Stereo Widening" impossible.

Overall rating 7/10

Very little to complain about,really

Good luck,fellow techies

Going from an old Nokia 6200 (which had great call quality and was ahead of its times) to a Moto Razr I suffered the torments of usability hell. No memory, no headphone jacks, terrible address book, substandard camera, terrible alarm clock, etc etc.

The day I got my digits on the W810i (i for international, unlocked quad band) was a happy day for me. Now, one year into using it I can expertly outline the pros and cons, and authoritatively issue bouquets and brickbats.

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Hot -

* Great battery life. I don't measure this in terms of hours and minutes but the reality of how often I had to charge. I use the phone quite a lot for listening to music especially and have never run out of charge when on the road. On days of low usage I have gone 3 days without a recharge, but topping up for 1 hour everyday is all you need. With the Razr I was constantly being stranded with a dead phone.

* Superior voice quality as distinct from CALL quality, which thanks to Cingular sucks like a vaccuum cleaner!

* Walkman quality music I use iPod earbuds for a good reason, sometimes a Sony MDR 7506More later.

* An expandable Sony ProDuo memory slot of upto 2GB.

I bought the phone with 512 MB and have not needed to upgrade yet.

* A feature rich 2 MP camera with flash, white balance controls, macro mode, night mode, zoom, resolution settings, and effects settings. This is quite adequate for point and click oppotunities but also great for video, I bring out my Rebel XT 8MP only for more "artistic" photography.

* A great FM radio. Works really well, although it does require the customary earphone-jack extension that also works as an antenna. I say "customary" because I don't think there is any phone that can play the radio without having to attach the headset cord.

* The proprietary audio jack (Sony Ericsson only) actually ends in a generic RCA type stero headphone plug! This saved the phone and allowed me to jettison their earbud in favour of the iBud, or my Hi-Fi studio monitor when I feel like it. You can easily switch from whatever you're listening to -the radio, the MP3 player or the video player and take a phone call by clicking a button. The song is paused, and will continue where you left off after ending the phone call. The iPhone is trumpeting this feature, but its been a part of the W810i for over a year.

* Has an MIDP 2.0 mobile java O/S, which means you can download any and every java app. I use the Opera Mobile browser instead of the packaged Sony browser and google maps which are are also a free j2ME download *no more paper printouts for me*. I also use a mobile app from cricinfo.tv for streaming cricket scores, and the pre-loaded Music Mate which playes basic guitar chords and also has a pitch pipe for tuning musical instruments.

I am a non-starter in video games so i won't comment, except to say i tried the "JC does Texas" preloaded game it was fun, but did not convert me into a gamer ;-)

* The Address book is really excellent. It has a full featured contact list system like a vCard that includes full address and multiple phone numbers for the same contact. In theory the calendar and address books can be synched with Outlook if you download the Sony Ericsson PC Suite and connect use Outlook to synch calendar and contacts. I have no reason to believe this won't work, except my work place will not allow personal devices to be installed or synched up on the work machine. At home I don't use Outlook, so I'm missing out on all the calendar and reminder functionality

* A nice alarm clock that lets you select days of the week you find" alarming".

So my alarm does not go off on weekends, then comes back on every day of the week.

This is a big improvement over the old way where you had to manually set the alarm for each day.

You snooze, you lose.

* I found this out very recently but the phone plays videos appreciably. There is a minor geek factor to this, but well worth it. You can take pretty much any video file you have from P2P, DVDs, flash, etc and convert it to the 3gp format. I use a free universal encoder that's quite a wonder. Its called SUPER and you will find it at e-rightsoft For example I watched the final episode of Heroes on my phone in a flight. Downloaded from bittorrent, encoded to 3gp to a 176*144 format that took all of 90MB. You can watch full length movies doing this, but the movie player functions like bookmarking are sorely missing for long files. If you don't watch the full movie at a stretch, you'll spend minutes simply forwarding to the correct spot the next time.

THIS IS HUGE -you can take any YouTube video with you on this phone. Yeah, yeah its a two step process but which one of you is busy saving the world anyway. Get a firefox plugin for downloading YouTube videos as .flv files (flash videos), then use SUPER to encode into 3gp. Voila! -I have Rihanna's Umbrella and Fergie's Bumps accompany me on all my rides.

* The phone is recognized a USB plug-and-play drive. Need I say more?

This is very useful, because its easy to move files and also charge it anywhere I have a computer with USB! Forget DRM, everyone is going away from that anyway. Also, Apple's way of requiring iTunes and having to register a device by deviceID before using it, that is way too restrictive.

My kingdom for USB P'nP freedom!

* W810 has Bluetooth and Infra Red ports. Use them for file transfers, synching or for headsets.

* An email client that is configurable for POP3 so I get my gmail, no problems. This is not a business phone so there is none, and never will be support for corporate email. Its easy enough getting to your personal email though, even without POP. Use the browser, doh!

* pretty standard but worth mentioning has voice dialing, that can save you in some situations.

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Not -

* No WiFi !

* No GPS receiver. This means that when you use google maps you have to manually figure out where you are, then also check if you are sticking to the route. I have had no problems with this myself, but could be incovenient for some.

* The T9 texting system is disappointing. The Razr did it much better. There is no multi-select word completion, and there is not auto-add to dictionary any time you type out a word that was not in the dictionary. The process of adding your own short forms, cute names and whatnot is very manual and laborious. Also, the auto completion with the Razr showed multiple word possiblities in a multi-select as you typed (like the AJAX javascript lookups in gmail adress) so that meant you could really fly through the message.

* An open chat interface called MyFriends (under the Messages menu) using which you can log on to all your chat clients at once AIM, yahoo, msn and IRC possibly google chat but i've not cracked that nut yet.

The setup is strictly for nerds/geeks/professionals an average user could never set this up. After spends hours on many forums I was able to set it up. You need the use of a free third party registration system: Yamigo to create a chat profile to which you can add your chat accounts. When you create your MyFriends profile in the W810, you need to provide the URL as the server and select the Allow Connection tab to "Any Network" or else this won't work.

MyFriends is a very ambitious concept and works in essence but fails in usability.

It keeps the internet connection open always because it relies on an HTTP service. When you lose connection it logs you out of all your chat systems, requiring you to re-login. PAINFUL. It also drains the battery a lot. Sony would have done better to do what the Razr did, have an AIM chat client onboard that connects directly to the AIM server, so you did not have to use a third party http service.

The best option is to set up the AIM and yahoo accounts to forward to cell phone when not signed in. Works like a charm.

* The phone is capable of playing streams really but bleeds to death on Cingular's cutting "EDGE".

Hear me ye all Cingular is the one thing that can kill Apple's iPhone. The situation can only be rescued if Jobs takes it over and refurbishes their network from the ground up.

I have NOT found a realplayer for java mobile yet, so it is really a player problem.

I'm sure there's an open source java project out there that can play all the streams.

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Shot -

* The earbuds from Sony are pure product suicide. They are so bad that I could barely hear the music and calls. If I had not tried the iBuds I may have hated this phone, only because of Sony's lazily and badly produced earbuds. That would have been a real shame because this is really quite an instrument.

* browsing pictures on the phone is painfully slow.

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What you got The W810i is already more and does more than the iPhone will ever be, or do. Hi-Fi music, first class camera, great voice quality (when the signal exists!), calendar, addressbook, reminders, notes, alarms, email, SMS, MMS, bluetooth, video recording and playback. The iPhone will conquer the world anyway, because it has sex appeal and ease of use like never before. Contextual buttons that come and go, basically an expanded interactive menu system. Brilliant breakthrough in usability. For those who don't want to spend the big bucks, you can get all that and more in less than half the price here.

Buy Sony Ericsson W810i Unlocked Cell Phone with 2 MP Camera, MP3/Video Player, Memory Stick Duo--Intern Now

I won't lie, I'm a Sony fan. Have been for years. When I was at school, I would take the Sony catalogue with me and look at each of the hundreds of products and admire the constantly evolving designs and technologies this company offers. Sad, I know.

There are two things that made Sony what it is today; televisions and Walkmans. Their TVs were and still are today the standard by which all TVs are measured by. And Walkmans, well, they revolutionised the way people listened to music. And of course they are now good, if not the best, at many other things, from video gaming to professional video cameras used by James Cameron and Michael Mann!

The company however has always annoyed a number of people by unnecessarily introducing proprietary formats. Some good, some bad, but ONE company alone will always find it hard to win public support with a format if it is not supported by other manufacturers. This was highlighted by the company's biggest EVER mistake, encapsulated in one word: ATRAC.

Sony were slow to the MP3 market. In the beginning they shunned it, developing the MD and Discman lines whilst Napster was taking on the world. It took computer companies like Creative and Apple to introduce MP3 players whilst the likes of Panasonic, Sony and Philips failed to embrace such a simple concept. Sony were so complacent that they built their own audio compression format, ATRAC, which could only be made by Sony's own Sonic Stage software, and played by Sony's hardware. The software was absolutely appalling, and did not really improve on MP3's already strong compression rate. It was cumbersome to use, and next to the hip image of an emerging iTunes, and the ever improving iPod, Apple did not just overtake Sony, they pretty much obliterated them out of a market they dominated. Heck, they invented the portable audio market.

Come 2005 and Sony execs are looking at themselves wondering what happened to their once-guranteed hundreds of millions a year. They quietly admitted to themselves that they blew it. But their other markets were thriving. Look at the PSPs, the PS2 and upcoming PS3. Look at their Bravia HD displays. Look at their groundbreaking HDV cameras. Sony are kicking butt, but Discmans and MD players are no longer a top 5 option for ANYONE. It is either an iPod video, an iPod shuffle, an iPod nano (get my point) or maybe, for those somewhat bored, a Creative whatchamacallit!

But they have found a way to use the Walkman brand, by using cutting edge technology and simple, ingenious design, and incorporating a music player in their line of phones.

The W810i is one of the more recent additions to an ever-expanding line of sublime phones and I've got to say "it is amazing!"

This phone, unusually so from Sony, allows a great deal of flexbility in terms of how the user can import and export data. The phone boasts a memory stick port, which is such a massive feature, because this means you can replace the standard 512MB stick with a 2GB stick (4GB is now available, but let prices fall before you buy one). 2GB!!! We may no longer be impressed by such a figure, but may I remind you that with an average 4 minute, 4 MB MP3 we are talking a ridiculous 500 song/45 albums capacity. That's an iPod nano my friend! Hook up your phone via USB and two drives pop up on your computer, the memory stick and the phone's internal drive, and just like your own HDs, you simply drag and drop data from folder to folder. It's brilliant, and obviously lends itself well as a USB stick for students. This means you can use it with PC and Macs, unlike an iPod, and it is not restricted to working with ONE program, unlike an iPod, although iTunes does rock!

So just how good is the Walkman feature? Well, it is very similar to the iPod interface, and whilst it may not boast the brilliant iPod navigation wheel it still has some effectively positioned buttons that allow volume change, starting and pausing music and skipping back and forth tracks. They are in the perfect place, and I commend the designers, because this is where the phone truly excels; ergonimics. With such a vast array of features, it must take a pretty smart bunch of people to make it anything but a hassle to use. The devoted Walkman button transports you to Artists/Albums/Playlists etc etc. You can change the equalizer, you can send your tracks via Bluetooth/Infrared to other people, you can basically have fun.

Sound wise? It sounds damn good. Is it hi-fidelity? No, not by a long shot (but then, neither are iPods!). It comes with good earphones, but I like good sound, so will use my best phones, and encode at a slightly lower compression to cull the best performance from this hardware. It does not sound as good as an iPod, but this is a very personal opinion. The differences are marginal, but this, unlike an iPod, does so much MORE!

A test of whether this is a direct competitor with an iPod is whether, if you took away all the other features and were left with just the Walkman feature, would it be good enough, and the answer is yes. It can improve. It would be great if Apple would allow iTunes to work with other players, because integrating the W810i with iTunes would be phenomenal. The W810i could improve by showing the music artwork, having MORE control over how your music is played, and I would argue to somehow make the menu less cluttered, although it is already well designed. The small details Apple lend their products are great, so if Sony could change the font or anything, to make it a LITTLE bit more streamlined I think it would be more or less perfect!. A great extension to this would be allowing Walkman phones to be dockable in cars like the iPod is, so drivers can control the songs through their stereo. Basically it is a great product, and Sony needs to think big like Apple so it can really stop people buying iPods! They have the quality, but they now need to work hard with PR and accessories to convince people who are set on buying an iPod to reconsider.

Next up is the 2 MP phone, which, for a phone, is remarkable (and is now no longer the biggest, with Nokia's N80 offering 3MP). Compared to the first batch of dedicated 2 MP cameras, this wipes the floor with most of 'em. It does not come close to any dedicated digi cameras on the market today, but I took some pictures this past weekend that were full of colour and detail. It is impressive stuff, and serves perfectly well for a number of applications. Yes it is grainy, no there is no optical zoom, but it has a macro feature, which is amazing. Noise is naturally evident, and I won't be taking my holiday photos with it, but considering where we were two years ago with camera phones it has to be said it no longer is a gimmick. In a year or two cameras on phones will be able to take pictures comparable to point and shoot digicams, and that my friends is a fact. Please look here at a picture I took with the w810i! (http://www.auff11.dsl.pipex.com/w810i.jpg). Looks good, doesn't it! The phone comes with flash, white balance, macro, panorama, nightshot, and a number of other features. The video camera is subpar, so I guess another year or two will mean DV quality cell phones coming our way (maybe not, lets not get excited!).

Another massive plus is the RDS radio. Reception seems to vary, but once it hooks onto a strong signal it sounds very good, and if you have RDS services it will show you the name of the station. That's another one over the iPod!

As for the phone. Well you got simple navigation towards your address book. Text messaging and calling is straightforward. The person on the other end of the line sounds good. You have a lot of detail on your Call History. It is so easy to make calling on mobile phones to be frustrating, much like Sony's earlier phones. Thankfully they have not taken anything for granted and made this an effortless task for users.

Sony's unsurpassed battery life lasts for hours upon hours. How they do it I will never know!

The screen is bright, and the phone saves battery power by reducing the strength of the LCD light based on the ambient light.

The phone is very modern, has a good weight, and unlike the Motorola RAZR, is not uncomfortable to hold in you hand (sure, it looks good, but I do want to HOLD a phone sometimes!). The phone numbers are small, but I really cannot expect anything different when you consider just what these designers are having to pull off.

I wish I could comment on the internet capabilities of this camera but my service provider still charges too much for surfing the web via my phone, and I find the whole experience a bit boring and slow. Mobile internet still has some way to go before it can really be an attractive proposition for me HOWEVER, the RSS reader function will certainly serve me well if I want a quick headline from the BBC website.

You see, when you have a camera, a phone, a Walkman, internet, text messaging, radio, games etc all in one package, that because of consumer demand needs to be small, be light, pack in a colour screen, long lasting battery and removable media, then you have to wonder how it will all work together. Sony have done brilliantly here, and as technology becomes more and more advanced (smaller, lighter, quicker, brighter etc) phones will continue to evolve. They are clearly the best place to find the latest technology, and the W810i may not be the absolute cutting edge, but it is certainly the king for the moment. Apple better watch out. Sony want their crown back. Thankfully there will be only one true winner, and that's us, the consumers!

Read Best Reviews of Sony Ericsson W810i Unlocked Cell Phone with 2 MP Camera, MP3/Video Player, Memory Stick Duo--Intern Here

...and it should be for this price.

This is my first review; I just had to add my two cents after reading the previous review.

I have used my phone with Cingular all over NYC, Long Island and Colorado. All I can say is that the reception is better than it was for my two previous phones, a Nextel Blackberry 7510 and most recently, a Verizon Blackberry 7130e.

I bought this phone after using a friend's cheapo pay-as-you-go Sony phone. I am a harsh critic of poorly implemented technology, but very quickly recognized that Sony Ericsson makes great phones with lots of very thoughtful features and, most importantly, pairs those features with the most intuitive user interface I have ever seen.

I am an early adopter of new technologies going back to the very first CD players, the Apple Newton and First Generation 5gig Ipod. Believe me, Sony has a real winner here with the Walkman cell phone line. It sounds great (as good as your source material) and the software for loading songs was refreshingly simple to install and use.

And, oh, the camera is pretty good. If you are going to an important event, it is no replacement for a dedicated digital camera with a full fledged flash. But for impromptu moments, it takes very good pictures in daylight.

Love the phone, would recommend without hesitation.

Want Sony Ericsson W810i Unlocked Cell Phone with 2 MP Camera, MP3/Video Player, Memory Stick Duo--Intern Discount?

9/19/06 Update. Since my first review, I'm still enjoying this phone and have added some other fun things to do with it. Besides the obvious music and watching video, I hook up this phone to my big stereo's auxilliary RCA inputs via the 35mm earpone cable and voila!, the sound rocks and is very portable especialy at parties. Speaking of parties, I save some encoded karaoke video clips with scrolling song text and minus one music to my phone then plug to the stereo and BAM! instantly I have a portable karaoke machine in my hands. Friends view the song on the phone screen as it plays while they sing. Mic is separate though but boy the fun never stops. Just some ways to improvise to have fun and this phone lets me do that. Try it...

I'd been shopping for many months now for a good phone and a portable mp3 player. After careful research among carrier phones, reading tech reviews, and among other brands out there including the ipods, W810i wins highly because I love listening to portable music plus the phone/camera/FM radio/expandable memory integration and yes the unique MegaBass all in one just fits my kind of need. Truly an audiophile's phone. Of course there are many similar capable phones or dedicated units out there but not quite like the W810i. Ipods and RAZR pale in comparison...in my opinion. W810i is just SUPERB. Just reading on the specs alone makes you say WOW. I have this phone for more than a month now and NOT a drop call occured. I have T-Mobile service with T-Zone for internet access which is fast in my experience since the EDGE GPRS is supported mostly in my area of travel. Downloading files and viewing websites was a fast treat. I enjoy this phone so much that I decided to upgrade the included removable 512mb memory stick duo to a Sandisc 4GB Ultra II Pro Duo just so I can store more than enough of my favorite mp3, video clips, and one full length movie too for my entertainment. Here are my own observations of this phone:

PROS:

1. Mega Bass. Adds more thunderous punch to the low frequencies of music and boy I love this feature. Tip: invest on a good quality heaphone/earphone for it makes a big difference folks in sound quality preferably those that have bass tube or bass enhancement designs.

2. A built in 5 channel Equalizer and other audio settings to suit your music taste.

3. A dedicated Walkman button for easy acces to music. Walkman menu and the overall phone menu is very easy to use and navigate around your music and other phone folders.

4. 2 Megapixel Camera with autofocus is a big plus compared to none.

5. Camera features includes:

selectable white balance

select between video mode(realtime action) and normal camera

self-timer, effects(sepia, b&w, negative, solarize)

shoot Mode has normal, panorama, frames, macro, night

mode and burst

self-portrait mirror on back

6. Easy to use tactile keypad buttons, center navigation D-pad, and has T9 text assist for messaging.

7. Speakerphone is loud, Quadband GSM, bluetooth, infrared, FM stereo with channel save presets for your favorite stations.

8. Video clips/movies in 3gp/mp4 format can be viewed verticaly or widescreen. Some games can be played also in widescreen.

9. A decent LED that acts like a penlight is helpful in finding lost keys in the dark. This light is helpful also to brigthen up your subject at night when taking pictures but it does not seem to function like a flash when you hit the shutter button.

10. Phone call quality so far for me is great. Clear crisp voice exchange reception from the other end with no static noise.

11. Battery life overall is very good even in long minutes of music listening and watching a few video clips.

12. EDGE GSM gives you fast internet access if supported by your carrier.

13. Operating software is fast and makes navigation between menus or retrieving content very responsive.

14. Expandable Memory slot. A BIG BIG plus folks especially if you want to add more memory. I have 4GB and it works.

15. While playing music, it will stop during an incoming call then resumes once you hang up. Nice feature.

16. Has music mode where phone functions are turned off. A plus when traveling in air or inside a hospital.

17. Basic amenities like notepad, calculator, calendar, clock, alarm, SMS/MMS, text, email, voicedial, phonebook, contact....and the rest you can read on the specs.

18. Some notables:

Video DJ create video sequences

Melody Composer/Music DJ create your own ringtones

Has some imbedded games/ringtones/themes already

Disc2phone software included for music transfer from PC

During music transfer or while plugged via the USB cable

to the PC, phone is charging.

Downloadable ringtones, games, themes, and wallpaper are

available from SonyEricsson.com of which some are free.

A dedicated shortcut key directs you to a menu of your

commonly used features on the phone.

Supports Opera Mini web browser which I think is much

better than the default Access NetFront Web Browser.

gives you option where to save files between phone memory

or the memory stick.

phone status setting gives you up front information on the

remaining memory capacity, battery life, and profiles.

CONS:

1. Ear speaker volume may be too low in crowded noisy place.

2. Carrier dependent features like downloading ringtones or games may not be supported yet by this phone as expected but there is always a work around if you know how.

3. Pixelation is more noticeable on my video clips if I switch to widescreen. Understandably expected but sad nonetheless.

4. Automatic standby offscreen is a good feature to conserve power but can be very annoying at times when you're still viewing the screen. I'm still trying to figure out if it can be adjusted at all. Sony are you listening?

5. No camera lens cover. No biggie for me since I have a Krusell Leather Case around the phone however its still a minus. I've seen people mod this phone and put a K750 back plate as lens cover.

6. No dedicated earphone slot. Must use first the supplied cable adapter to hook up.

Overall the phone is great and user friendly. It meets most of my expectations in ease of use, common useful features, and of good quality. Just know that if you are tech savy, you can do many things on this phone that may seem limiting to others on average. You may hear complaints from early users a month or two ago about drop calls but this had been fix already or can be fix by updating the software easily from the manufacturer's website. It is also rumored that Cingular might carry this phone later this year. If I may brag a little, some online reviews give W810i as one of the Editor's top choice for cellphone. It is also one of the popular cellphones in asia and still continues to grab attention worldwide. So far W810i can be found on online retailers and third party dealer stores. Getting it unlocked by itself with no carrier plan is very expensive. Dont' do that unless money is not an issue. Get it cheaper with a plan or wait for Cingular..if ever. I know the wait is such a drag. Better yet if you can't wait, grab this phone and avail of Cingular or T-Mobile services now...it still works.

Finally, if you love music or listening to tunes on the go, or better yet be able to watch video clips, watch movie(I do), browse the internet, play 3D games, take pictures, and most importantly make and received phone calls, then you're going to love this phone. Its simply loaded with fun stuff at your disposal. Goodluck and I hope this review was helpful.

Skullcandy Super Pipe Audio Docks S7PPBZ-BZ (Black)

Skullcandy Super Pipe Audio Docks S7PPBZ-BZ
  • Speaker diameter: 75mm
  • Frequency response 100-20K Hz, impedance: 10 ohms
  • Max input power: 10k Ohm
  • AC and DC power supplies also charges iPod
  • Remote control

I was looking for a small, portable iPod speaker with a remote control for my living room, and without investing a ton of money. I went shopping in my local area and purchased a portable iPod player for $50 from a big box retailer. Ugh. What a mistake! The sound quality was horrible tinny and echo-ey. Needless to say, I returned it the next day. I then did a lot of research and found very positive feedback for both the Skullcandy Pipe and Super Pipe. I chose the Super Pipe because of the large size of our living room/dining room and the fact that the description of the product noted the larger range the speakers of this larger model could handle. Honestly, I could not be happier! Great sound for the small size of the unit and I feel the price is really reasonable. Also, while I've read from reviewers of this product that it's not a docking station because it doesn't charge the iPod, that is completely untrue. I've played it in my living room for numerous hours at a time several times, removed it from the Super Pipe and placed it on my iHome clock radio, and it immediately says, "Charged" each time. A great product for the price you won't be disappointed!

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Overall, it is a great loud little speaker!

Unfortunately, it does not deliver the best sound.

I still like it for the price.

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I recently purchased this product for a friend of mine. Upon testing it out one speaker was working. Then my friend called me and told me that none of the speakers are working. How can you sell a product that doesn't work properly

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I chose the Super Pipe over the Pipe for a greater output of sound whilst still being portable and having the ability to power the unit with battieries. At first glance I was surpised at the size of the unit, much bigger than I expected. Visually it looks good, easy to operate, remote control is nice, but most importantly was the sound quality. It has good clear sound but No discernable bass at all, a big let down as I have several Skullcandy headphones and am very pleased with the level of bass. I tryed adjusting the bass thru the EQ setting on the ipod but no real noticable difference. It's like it needs an external bass speaker to be plugged into it, but I see no way to do this. If the unit had any half way decent level of bass I would have rated it 5 out of 5.

A bit of a let down. Hope this review helps.

Awesome speaker for travel, made of strong aluminum tubing. on the expensive side, but worth it. Sound quality is great, base is so so. But what do you expect?

NAXA Electronics NRC-157 Digital Alarm Clock with Digital Tuning AM/FM Radio and CD Player (Black/Si

NAXA Electronics NRC-157 Digital Alarm Clock with Digital Tuning AM/FM Radio and CD Player
  • Top Loading CD Player
  • Digital LCD Display Alarm Clock
  • AM FM Radio Stereo
  • 20 Track Programmable CD Memory
  • Alarm, Snooze, and Sleep Functions

Very poor tuning. Uses an analog knob to tune the digital display. It has a digital display but appears to not tune in discreet steps as a digital tuner does. Very difficult to settle the digits on a specfic FM station, like 92.1. You hear the station as you approach the correct numbers and well after passing the numbers desired, like an old analog tuner. Appears to be a poor quality receiver, poor selectivity, poor sensitivity. Very tinny sounding. By the time it was given as a gift the "exculsive 30 day return policy" period had expired. Put it back in the box and stuffed it in the closet. Wasn't worth spending more money to return. Will give it to Goodwill. I gave a rating of 4 stars for features, it has what I wanted, but is very poor quality overall. Remember: YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR!!!! I "ass-ume" that this seller does sell some better quality am/fm cd player clock radios.

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CD player broke within 2 days. Naxa NX-157 DIGITAL ALARM CLOCK WITH DIGITAL TUNING AM/FM RADIO AND CD PLAYER

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The light on the front is very bright, it will light up your room at night. My didn't work properly after a week so I returned it and didn't get another.

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The display light is on only when the radio is playing. When radio is off there is no back light. There is no way of seeing the time in the middle of the night. The tuner was hard to set on a channel. The speakers were scratchie as if the dial was off the station. When the radio was on it would display the radio station and not the clock. Strange. Sent it back the same day I recieved it. The radio has pontential, maybe a little more engineering.

I just took it out of the box, read the instructions, put in a known-good CD and pressed play...it didn't work. Got another known-good CD, inserted it, pressed play...nothing. (Yes, the volume is set correctly tested it with the radio function, and yes, I set the switch on the side to use the CD function, and yes, the other CD player buttons work correctly the skip track, random, program, and other buttons seem to work fine.) Everything else seems to work, but I bought it specifically for the CD function and its ability to be programmed to shut off automatically after I go to sleep listening to a CD.

When I received the product itself from 4AlarmClocks, it was packed in its own box and shipped inside a larger cardboard box with packing materials. However, the product box was badly dented on one corner, though the shipping box had no damage. I suspect it was dropped or crushed in the distributor's location before they repackaged it to send it to me, and that may have something to do with the defect. In other words, the manufacturer may have shipped a working product to 4AlarmClocks, but the distributor may have damaged the product before it reached me.

Sony DSX-MS60 DSXMS60 Marine In-Dash MP3/WMA/AAC Digital Media Receiver w/ Internal USB and Front Au

Sony DSX-MS60 DSXMS60 Marine In-Dash MP3/WMA/AAC Digital Media Receiver w/ Internal USB and Front Aux
  • Detachable faceplate with 2-line display and front aux / Dimensions: 9.5 x 4.4 x 10.2 inches
  • Integrated Tune Tray with USB 1-wire input
  • MP3/WMA/AAC playback1 with DM+ enhancement technology
  • Intuitive Quick-BrowZer and ZAPPIN search features
  • Satellite radio/HD Radio ready using Sony Bus

I have had no issues with an enclosed iphone shutting down due to heat, as some have reported. The remote is very handy and I really like the iphone/ipad attachment tray.

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With IPod connectivity ONLY, and no cd playing feature, there is less internal mechanisms to possibly malfunction These days, who wants to deal with cd's anyway? ( iTunes Music or Pandora Radio anyone?) With the flip down faceplate feature of "hiding" your IPod within the unit, it is protected, and charging at the same time. With the ease of use of controls, as well as excellent sound capabilities and quality features, this is a perfect marine radio, especially for a boat. I highly recommend it.

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I was modernizing my pontoon boat and wanted a better radio than the pyle that was on it. The old radio was new, but i found it a bit junky. The sound was not so hot, tuning for distance was poor and the display buttons were lit poorly. I was happy when the Sony arrived and i got it installed. The display is clean, the buttons are well marked and it has excellent signal. Typical bulletproof Sony product. Highly recommended.

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The Sony Marine Stereo exactly filled my needs and was a breeze to install. I was up and running with our favorite music in 15 minutes. The product arrived promptly and in great condition. The price was very competitive and the purchase experience was great.

Sony WMFX451 Walkman

Sony WMFX451 Walkman
  • Digital synthesized AM/FM stereo tuner
  • 20 station preset tuning (15 FM/5 AM)
  • Auto reverse stereo cassette playback
  • Anti-roll mechanism
  • Automatic shutoff in playback mode

This cassette player was advertised as "new, unopened", which it was.......but a coupon inside the package expired in 2001! So clearly the item has been around a long time. But it works well and is just what I was looking for, actually replacing an almost identical cassette player I had that broke. I love the directional option so it plays both sides w/o beng tinkered w/ during my walk. The sound is of good quality and the headphones are comfortable for walking. I am very pleased w/ this product.

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This is a very good walkman at a cheap price. Some walkmans are like $100 and up. This one is below $50. It is a good price. It is very good if you like to jog around the block.

Timex Auto Set AM/FM Clock Radio with Nature Sounds ~ T308S

Timex Auto Set AM/FM Clock Radio with Nature Sounds ~ T308S
  • Auto Set means you'll never have to worry about setting this clock!
  • AC Power with Battery Backup
  • Nature Sounds Feature with Sounds of Wind Chimes, Brook, Ocean Surf and Birds
  • Sleep to AM/FM Radio or Nature Sounds
  • Wake to AM/FM Radio, Nature Sounds or Buzzer

I have one of these radio alarm clocks next to my bed as well as using one at work. It's a fairly compact design to fit into a corner of my desk or someone's cube at work and see the clock as well as listen to their music.

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Read my original review here:

http://www.amazon.com/review/R2DGZ8CH17IQXH/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm

It's worthless as an alarm clock (read my review) so I use it to listen to music while cooking, now. Since writing the first review, the radio has begun to short out. So I need to spin the volume wheel back & forth, to get the radio working again. This thing wasn't cheap to buy, but it's not built to last. This clock radio sucks so bad that I will never ever buy any Timex products again. It's absolutely terrible.

RCA RS2181i Audio System with Universal iPod Dock

RCA RS2181i Audio System with Universal iPod Dock
  • 20-watt bookshelf sound system with iPod dock, CD player, and digital AM/FM radio
  • Universal dock for iPod plays and charges most docking iPod models
  • Clock/timer function allows you to wake up or sleep to your radio, CD, or iPod
  • Customize your sound with bass boost and digital EQ with presets or custom setting
  • Front-panel audio input for use with MP3 players, computers, etc.

This reveiw is for; RCA CD Micro Stereo System with iPod Dock RS2181I

Ever since my wife & I bought an I-pod, we hardly ever listen to CD's anymore. We have been looking for an adequate shelf system so we can listen to music in the bedroom that sounds decent and inexpensive. We found the RCA RS2181I last night at a local Target for $95. Here are my simple observations;

PROS

Nice compact size thin top loading, vertical CD player saves space.

CD player works great. Most of my CD's are recorded CD-R's.

Compatible with ALL Apple I-pods including Touch, Video and 1st to 5th generation I-pods (plastic spacers for all sizes are included).

Unit charges your I-pod with the connected, spring-loaded front attachment that retracts when not used.

Nice remote which you can even use to change songs on your I-pod (song skip or go back).

The remote also has nice range because I used it far from across the room.

Has alarm & sleep mode which allows you to wake up or sleep to either your I-pod, CD or radio.

You can program up to 32 radio stations (FM or AM).

Has two extra inputs for connecting other devices such as other MP3 players that are not I-pods.

One button equalizer settings for simplicity with individual settings for Rock, Pop, Jazz, Classical, Flat (?) or settings can be customized.

One button bass boost. Not strong enough to rattle the dishes, but a moderate bass boost.

Speaker connections are the standard, spring loaded black-red wire, so I suppose if you ever blow-out the stock speakers you can replace them with anything.

CONS

Only 10 watts a channel for a total of 20 (left & right). Not loud enough to annoy your neighbors, but loud enough for my wife & I to listen to in the bedroom.

The spring-loaded, retractable I-pod attachment occasionally sticks to the unit when it is pressed all the way into the unit.

LCD display is difficult to see due to very, thin LCD numbers & letters. You can basically only see it if you are directly in front of it.

Blue light at night is a little too bright, but might be OK for a kids' night light.

AM/FM tuner has no "seek" function. You must manually search each radio station.

Awkward looking AM, plastic antenna (about 3" X 4" plastic rectangle) that you must hook up if you listen to AM, but the FM antenna is just your standard, thin black wire.

Overall, my wife & I are mildly satisfied with the unit so far. It's a step up from the ancient cassette boom box it replaced. It works very well with the Apple I-pod, so I highly recommend it. It's not super loud, but it's loud enough for my wife & I. Great stereo for the bedroom, office or small apartment and that uses very, little space.

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I went to a store and saw this, then ordered it on Amazon. The one in the store was the one seen in the main picture.

There seems to be many models of this speaker system and they all have the same model number so it is impossible to know what one you will be getting through online merchants or Amazon and it is shameful that RCA has done this!

Even when you get the speaker system the image on the box and instructions do not look like what you get in the box.

The main picture graphic is not the same as what you will be getting. The Speaker on your right will not look like that and rather the speaker system will come with two of the speakers that are on the left side of the image.

Another change is the Ipod dock at the bottom of the speaker system. The Ipod dock does not slide in when not in use to keep dirt and dust off of it. The Ipod dock stays out to collect dust and dirt and can not be manually pushed in when not in use like the store model that I saw.

Overall this system has more audio connectors then most speaker systems I have seen. It gives you all audio connector options available to have two more Ipods or Zunes hooked into it if you have the correct cables plus the Ipod dock that is already built in.

The system looks really nice but when it is off there is an ugly light that looks like a red ring. The sound quality is like every other speaker system in it's price range. It sounds ok.

The only two bad things I thought were the following. I feel these almost ruin the whole experience for Ipod and Zune users alike.

1) The buttons are so small and need so much force to push them in. The system is such light plastic that when you press in on any button you have to hold the system or the force from the amount that you need to push the buttons in to make them function moves the whole system. You will need to use the remote that is included so this does not happen. What is the point of the remote when you need to be within a few feet to see the Ipod or Zune screen. Almost makes the remote pointless unless you are using the cd drive. It's Very annoying for Ipod and Zune users.

2) The Ipod dock does not close like the store model that I loved and I'm disappointed in that since the dock will collect a lot of dust.

Overall this is an ok system but has it's flaws. No speaker system is perfect.

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This product was purchased as a gift for a 15 year old girl. She loves the product. The sound is great (and loud)! Great buy for the money.

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Purchased as a gift. Receiver had a profound need for a new stereo and has expressed complete satisfaction with this stereo system and has not had a problem with the item. Worth the money spent.

I've had this system for several months and up until recently have been pleased with the sound quality. I have my computer & TV hooked up to it and it does produce good distinct sound for a 20 watt system. The build quality is really disappointing in that it is plastic and VERY light weight. The IPod dock is in a fixed position so it does collect dust & dirt. As I don't own an IPod, this is not a big deal to me. The problem I have with it is that it now has a tendency to randomly produce a very loud "buzzing" at random times while in use. I don't know whether this is a "normal" problem that occurs if it's to close to other electronics or just it's lack of quality. I've had 2 other micro-systems ( a Phillips & Magnavox ) that had no problems whatsoever and lasted several years. Thankfully, I did not buy this radio at full price, so I'm not TOO upset. However, because of the "buzzing" and the cheap build, I honestly would recommend that this radio be avoided. RCA, in my opinion, was a very good company whose products lasted. It's unfortunate that their "bottom line" seems to dictate quality and value anymore.

Myself, I'm going back to Sony as I've not had any major issues or problems with their products.

Coby CRA68BLK Digital AM/FM Dual Alarm/Clock Radio, Black

Coby CRA68BLK Digital AM/FM Dual Alarm/Clock Radio, Black
  • large LED display
  • sensitive AM/FM tuner
  • dual alarm clock with sleep/snooze timers, wake to music or buzzer
  • battery backup with 9V battery

So, what is it that everyone wants from an alarm clock? A nice sounding alarm, which is not too jarring, but loud enough to wake you. Well, the Coby CRA68BLK can satisfy the second requirement alright. In fact, if you feel like being jolted awake by an air raid siren, then this is your alarm clock. What else do people want out of an alarm clock? A nice looking design--perhaps easy on the eyes, and compact? Well, as far as design goes, the Coby is okay. I mean, it's black, and it's sleek, but with all the white numbers and letters and loud, obnoxious buttons, it's definitely not simple nor state-of-the-art. For example, when you press a button on it, it sounds like you're breaking it. I mean, why can't the buttons just be gentle, quiet, and smooth? Instead they're hard and annoying to press. The other problem with this clock is how big it is. I mean, in this day and age if you can fit a phone, wi-fi chip, GPS chip, accelerometer, digitizer, and a lithium-ion battery into a device smaller than your wallet, then why can't you just make a compact and sleek alarm clock? I would say the only positive attribute to the Coby is the display. The display is the perfect brightness: not too bright, not too dark, but just right. The only problem is there is a lot more to an alarm clock than just the display. I wouldn't recommend this clock to anyone. Then again, most alarm clocks nowadays seem to be missing the point entirely. Just give us what we want: a nice sounding alarm, a properly lighted display (maybe with an ambient light sensor), a backup battery ( a necessity), and a simple, compact design. Why is this so difficult?

Radio Shack Hazard Alert Weather Radio

Radio Shack Hazard Alert Weather Radio
  • Digital SAME technoloty for localized warnings
  • Easy programming by state and county
  • Auto-scans all NOAA channels
  • 120 hour battery backup
  • Includes AC adapter

Hailing from hurricane territory (NW FL) we make sure to have certain items on hand at the beginning of each summer. One of these things are fresh AA batteries for our Hazard Alert Radio from Radio Shack. Certified by both Public Alert and NOAA it delivers weather alerts and other warnings specific to the area in which you program it to monitor.

The front of the radio has a 4 color light panel indicating alert status ranging from "ready" to advisory, watch and warning. There is also a text display. You can also program it to monitor multiple locations which is helpful if you have family or other interests in another part of the country. Its footprint is small and fits easily on a table or bookshelf. It is fully programmed which enables you to choose your location from a list of options in order to receive up-to-the-minute weather updates specific to your needs. It plugs into a regular outlet and takes 6 AA batteries to get up to 120 hours of back-up time during outages.

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I bought one of these for my mother in MO 18 or so months ago. It worked great. The alert was loud enough that she could hear it and it went off too much, (but that was the fault of the active storm season, not the radio.)

I liked it well enough that I bought one for me in FL. It worked fine until I noticed that I hadn't been hearing the Wednesday alert tests and the display read "Check OPs," meaning that the radio had noticed that it hadn't received any alerts in quite awhile.

Last week, when tornadoes were popping up all around my mother, she said her radio wasn't going off and that "Check Ops" was displayed. She took it to a local Radio Shack where they confirmed that it was still programmed correctly, but that they had discovered that the units had a high failure rate after they got several months old.

So, take all those 1 and 2-star ratings with a grain of salt. I'd have given the radio a 5 out of the box, but it would be a zero today. What good is a weather alert radio that doesn't alert?

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works really well and is simple to hook up and operate. Not too many options and buttons. It gets the job done.

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I ordered 4 originally. Caution, do not buy from Capitol Outlet. 3 came in perfect and in new condition. 1 came in used, scratched up, and with double sided tape on the back of it.

The other 3 work perfectly. I had no issues programming it. Did not even look at the book till I wanted to set the time. The rest was prompted on start up.

I like the back light on auto. Power saving and functional. The volume is great, if not too loud. The alarm clock works well and the audio quality is adequate.

My home is on the fringe of coverage so the signal is not perfect. However, you can build or buy external antennas. NOAA even has links on their site for how to do so.

I built our with the plans at this link:The alerts work well and I like how granular the options are.

Since ordering these, I have now ordered 6 more for people I work with and family members. That is how much I like these.

Save 75% Off

If your concerned about your safety during severe weather do not buy this product. Product would lose its signal,not go off in severe weather and a "check op" error would always appear. Replaced with a sangean cl-100 which has great reception, no signal loss and alerts as advertised.

Tivoli Audio M1WNBRZ Model One AM/FM Table Radio (Wenge/Bronze)

Tivoli Audio M1WNBRZ Model One AM/FM Table Radio
  • High-perfromance table radio with simple design and superior sound reproduction
  • Attractive, furniture-grade, handmade wood cabinet doubles as acoustically inert housing.
  • 3-inch long-throw driver ensures accurate tonal balance and bass response
  • State-of-the-art discrete component FM tuner improves reception and increases clarity

Several years ago I inherited a KLH 21--the inspiration for Henry Kloss' current Tivoli Model One. It is among my most cherished possessions, but sentiment aside--this radio is an advancement of the KLH "original" in nearly every aspect.

Audio tonal quality is much like "beauty"--it's in the eye (or ear) of the beholder. Considering the price and genre of this radio--I consider its audio fidelity to be exceptional--powerful and very pleasing. I prefer its design objective that incorporates ONE superior amp and speaker--opposed to TWO lesser channels for stereo. I've never been able to rationalize a "stereo" design where the speakers are separated by only eight-inches of face-plate!

FM RECEPTION: I own way more than my fair share of radios. Is this product on par with the classic $1500-dollar McIntosh MR-78? Not at all, but remember--Amazon is asking you for a mere $120 to own this radio. Within all reasonable considerations--FM performance is excellent. I suspect the criticism of FM reception you read here is due to a couple factors that are not the fault of this radio. First, NO GOOD FM TUNER can tell the difference between a weak distant station and all the "RF trash" generated within your environment by computers, "smart" appliances, and security systems. In fact, a superior tuner is MORE prone to such interference. Secondly, EVERY GOOD FM TUNER requires a good antenna--lose that included 12-inch "rat tail". I use a C Crane "FM Reflect" tuned wire dipole which terminates directly into the 75-ohm coaxial external antenna connector on this radio. FM sensitivity, selectivity, and capture ratio are very good. I routinely receive distant signals with good quality, and I have NEVER seen this radio overload from a strong local signal at a reasonable distance from its transmitter.

AM RECEPTION: My major criticism of this product is ironically my major accolade! Out of the box, this radio is unresponsive to all but the most powerful AM signals, and it IS NOT equally sensitive across the full 540-1700kHz band. This deficiency CAN be rectified with a $40 addition of the Terk "AM Advantage" inductively-coupled loop antenna. Set it atop or beside this radio, and the AM reception character changes dramatically. Maybe there is a "blessing" in this design--as there are NO "whistles", intermod, or overloading apparent on this radio's AM band reception! With the exception of a very few (and expensive) specialty receivers--the Model One provides the finest AM audio I have found in a mass-market radio. If your option for music lies on AM, you will be very pleased with this radio!

My favorite feature is the very smooth 5:1 geared ANALOG rotary tuning. It's generally accurate, and the wide bandspread and variable-intensity tuning light make it a joy to use. Analog tuning is technically superior in EVERY respect to today's commonplace "digital" tuning. Inconvenient? Maybe ever so slightly, but worth the minimal effort.

FINE PRODUCT... An easy FIVE-STAR recipient!

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I was looking for a radio that would look good on my kitchen counter and receive a variety of non-commercial FM radio stations.

This radio does both very well. I bought the white/silver color and it looks good in the kitchen. Except for one small FM station, the reception has exceeded my expectations. The music sounds great. It's a little too "bassy", but with the volume turned up, the sound from one small single speaker radio is amazing and fills the room with a rich sound. I also like the fact that you can plug in a real antenna.

My frustration is when someone is talking on the radio. In addition to music, I like to listen to news (mainly NPR) and sports. There is way too much bass when someone is speaking. As other reviewers have said, it would have been great to have a bass and treble control.

So the bottom line for me is great for music and reception, but poor for someone speaking (news, talk radio and sports).

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I'm sure there's lot of people like me would love to have a good sounding radio right on their desk, where it's easy to adjust the volume (when a phone call comes in), and be able to easily tune it to different stations as your mood suits.

I don't have the space for a big boom box, nor do I care to blast the sound real loud in my home office. I also don't need flashing lights, a graphic equalizer, or the numerous other features you seem to find on most other radios these days.

The Tivoli Audio Henry Kloss Model One table radio was exactly what I was looking for. It's unobtrusive on even a crowded desk like mine, yet it puts out sound that belies the small size. I also really liked the simplicity of design -just three knobs (power, volume, and tuning) and a couple of indicator lamps (power on and signal strength). It has a retro look that's simple and very clean.

The FM tuning knob with 5:1 gear ratio allows you to really "ease into" a station, and a corresponding LED glows brightest when the signal is strongest. I actually find it to be easier to use than a digital tuner, and much more precise. I found that I didn't even miss not having presets. I've been able to tune in stations clearly with this radio that I cannot get on any other radio I own.

The speaker is small (3"), but puts out very clean sound, with a nice bass boost from the port in the bottom of the case.

The real hardwood case is a nice departure from the particle board and plastic that most electronic products are made from today.

The unit weighs about 4 lbs., and feels substantial in your hands when you hold it.

Do I wish it had a tone control? I don't miss it at all. The sound is so nicely balanced without it, and adding another knob would take away from it's simplicity of design and operation.

At around a hundred bucks, you can certainly pay less for a radio, but I think you'd have a tough time finding a unit that is so compact, simple, and great-sounding at any price. I'm planning on having this around for a long time.

I think a lot of young people may feel that this radio doesn't have enough bells and whistles, but I'll bet there's a lot of middle-aged businessmen like me that would love to receive this radio as a gift. I think it's something that would be truly appreciated, and used daily for many years. What more could you ask for for a hundred bucks?

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I was sure I would be disappointed with this radio given all the rave reviews I had read about. After all, it simply couldn't be that good, could it? I am quite happy to say that I was wrong, it is every bit as good as everyone says. I am full of admiration for the engineers who worked on this little marvel.

My listening is 95% classical, so my attention is always focused on the sound being natural, detailed, and musical. The Model One starts out with the best FM tuner on the market (hands down), which pulls in signals cleanly, even weak ones. My immediate reaction upon first hearing the sound was surprise at the details that were present in the music over an FM signal. I had always imagined that the reason my radios sounded so poor in the past was that the FM signal simply could not hold enough detail. The Model One proved this reasoning quite wrong, there is a lot of music in the FM signal. In fact, I could effortlessly pick out every instrument in the orchestra on this radio.

In the beginning, I was not overly impressed with the low frequencies produced by this radio. But then, I had simply set the radio down on an old desk, and could feel the desk vibrating in sympathy with the low frequencies from the radio. So I went to Home Depot and got a very heavy piece of ceramic tile to place under the radio to prevent the table from siphoning off all the bass. The difference was dramatic. This radio produces a LOT of bass. Very clear and musical bass. The elephant from Saint-Saens' Carnival of the Animals placed the string bass right in my room, I could swear. I found that when I placed the radio about 8 inches from a wall, the bass was even further enhanced. Other reviewers like to marvel at how much bass there is coming from this tiny radio, but I am much more impressed by how tight and musical the bass actually is. This is not to take anything away from its very clear and reliable treble range; it is just that one can't help noticing how small the radio really is, and with all that bass, and .... well, you know.

This is by far the most value I have ever gotten out of this little money for a piece of audio equipment. The Model One is very, very, sweet and musical, and this description is true for its entire remarkable frequency range. I listen to it about 9-10 hours a day, and weeks after the first listen, I still catch myself looking up from what I was doing at that moment to admire its sound.

My wife tends to ride me a bit about my expensive tastes in relatively high-end audio equipment. She thought her $20 GE radio was plenty adequate, even for an NPR junkie like herself. Seeing that the Kloss Model One is the radio sold by NPR at its website store, I gave her one as a gift. Now she claims that the prospect of waking up to its warm, rich sound is enough to make her look forward to getting up in the morning. In fact, she's beginning to agitate for two more identical radios for additional rooms in the house.

My own feelings about the radio are a bit more toned down but positive. In most similar radios "stereo" is an exuse to use cheap speakers. This monaural unit, on the other hand, features one carefully tuned and balanced speaker (the weight of the magnet itself testifies to its superior quality), reminding some of us that the "improvement" of stereo over monaural "hi fi" can be illusory at best. The sound is full, rich, and complete over the entire sonic spectrum. Moreover, the absence of tone controls encourages the listener to trust the engineers' judgment rather than waste time on equalizer switches. (I'll confess that personally I miss the ability to increase the treble and roll back the bass, which is too strong even without the gratuitous add-on "subwoofer.") Finally, the tuning knob is the smoothest and most accurate, not to mention the most finger friendly, that I've used.

Pure functionality, elegant simplicity, and noticeable attention to quality (especially the wood cabinet) make this the one to own. Add a CD player, and you have a mini-component system built around a sensitive, responsive tuner and carefully tuned speaker. Add another speaker, and you've got a stereo system (a supplement that, according to Consumers' Reports, makes this a better-sounding radio than the Bose, Boston Acoustics, or Cambridge competitors)--but at the expense of some of the compactness and economy which is undeniably a big part of this item's understated appeal.

Midland WR-120EZ NOAA Public Alert-Certified Weather Radio with SAME, Trilingual Display, and Alarm

Midland WR-120EZ NOAA Public Alert-Certified Weather Radio with SAME, Trilingual Display, and Alarm Clock
  • SAME programming sounds an alert only when specific counties are threatened
  • Receives 7 NOAA channels with flood, tornado, thunderstorm, and other warnings
  • 25-county memory system; 90 dB siren, voice alert, and flashing LED warning systems
  • Built-in clock with alarm and snooze; measures 6.0 x 1.5 x 5.0 inches (W x H x D); 1-year warranty
  • Trilingual (English Spanish French) Compact alert monitor for weather, civil emergency, and other hazards

I have been dreading purchasing a weather radio for some time because they all seem too expensive for just a radio that receives the weather band. But, I figured out that it is time to take this out of the "family" budget. I literally looked at every single weather radio on Amazon. I found out that I want a radio with SAME (Specific Area Message Encoding) so it will alert for inclement weather. (tornadoes at night are an issue where I live) Most other radios seem to have issues with reliability, reception, or construction--issues I want to avoid. So, I narrowed it down to the Midland radios: WR-100, WR-120, and WR-300.

I was leery of purchasing this at first because of the limited review at the time. I found at that this is just the updated model of the WR-100, which seems to be one of the more popular weather radios. I went to Midland's website(to lookup the WR-120) and saw that the item was just released, hence the limited info.

I would consider this a great standard/staple alert weather radio. The SAME technology lets you setup your county, or multiple counties. You can find your county codes online at NOAA (search: national weather service radio codes to be taken there directly).

I really like the backlight on the display--a nice cool blue with easy to read lettering. The interface itself is great, it lets me flip through all current alerts with the up/down buttons, so I don't even have to listen to the radio to get the most up to date status. It is simple enough that my 4 year old could easily figure it out.

The alarm has 3 settings-tone, voice, and display.

-The tone alarm is loud! -Which is great, not an annoying sound, just loud. It will wake you up. We can hear it all through our house.

-The voice alarm plays the loud tone for about 5 seconds and then goes into the radio broadcast(at the volume you set). I wish that the voice setting played just the radio, as I am used to a clock-radio alarm clock. The loud alert startles me out of sleep! I want the alarm to wake me, not scare me.

-The display just illuminates the backlight. Not useful for me at night, as I would not wake up to a soft blue, glowing light. I am sure this is plenty useful for some, and I will probably change the radio to this once we are out of tornado season.

Personally, I have not seen the multiple alert lights (5 for each-alert, watch and warning) to be all that useful because every message that my local weather service puts out does not code to the varying degree levels. I am sure this is useful for some, but I live right next to the NOAA station and they do not take advantage of this feature.(more a complaint against my local NOAA than the radio) -ps the reception is great....because I live right next to the NOAA station, so my review of that is biased. :)

The radio runs on three AA batteries for backup. Not sure how long they last. There was no difference in reception, backlight, and radio functions when I unplugged it. This seems like this might be a great radio to do some light traveling.

I could not justify spending the extra on the WR-300 to get any additional features. (Maybe Midland can include a tone volume option in the next release model that lets you choose between several volume levels for any alert? Then the radio would be perfect.) I would have rated this 4.5 stars because the voice alert is not pure voice, but half stars are not an option, so I rounded up. Midland's Research and Product Development team seems to listen to customer reviews, so maybe the voice alarm can be fixed.

Definitely a must have family radio for safety, and the best value out there--I am glad I purchased it.

Phew! What a lengthy review! :)

Buy Midland WR-120EZ NOAA Public Alert-Certified Weather Radio with SAME, Trilingual Display, and Alarm Now

I ordered the Midland WR-120 weather radio April 24 and received it on April the 27. It took me about 5 mintutes to set it up, the manual was very easy to follow. As I was looking on line to see if I did every thing right, and how to tell if the radio was working, the alarm when off telling me my county was under a tornadoes warning. I could not believe this, the TV had just told us we were in the clear. Because of this radio my family and I when to the basement of our home and was safe. I awoke this morning to find others was not so lucking.

I believe all home should have a Midland weather radio, I am glad we did.

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This is a really nice radio, with a great deal at Amazon.com! My home's household current glitches the radio on a 6-plug extender, but I fixed that by unplugging my iPad charger and the radio's power adapter, and plugging those into the regular outlet. When the 6-plug adapter was used, the antenna had to be in a certain position (even though it's by a window!) and now any antenna position I want, it works like my WR-100 did like a charm. It hasn't sounded yet, so I don't have a full review. (It came on test day, but wasn't opened until quarter of 3 PM. I'd recommend this radio to anyone who needs a radio and is WORTH EVERY PENNY!

This is a new version of the WR-100.

New features:

-Button Beeps On/Off Menu Option

-Weekly Test Siren On/Off Menu Option

-3 Languages (English, Spanish, French)

-Larger Screen

-5 alert lights per alert (5 lights per alert X 3 alerts = 15 lights), formerly 1 light per alert (1 light per alert X 3 alerts = 3 lights)

-New Warning Siren (Same as WR-100 and WR-300 except louder and slower)

Full review once I SEE an alert.

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The purpose behind purchasing this type of radio is to provide a reliable early warning in the event of severe weather.

The city of Joplin, MO which is about thirty minutes to our southwest was destroyed this last Sunday by an EF-5 tornado with 200+ mph winds. 122 people have died and 1500 are still listed as missing. I've narrowly avoided being in several tornadoes merely by dumb luck. I don't intend to be unprepared again, particularly in the event that my family is sound asleep when one of these monsters comes rolling through.

All that said, the key word here is 'Reliable'.

Despite the glowing reviews, the Midland WR-120 DOES HAVE SOME LIMITATIONS. Maybe all weather radios have these same limitations, but I'm somewhat disappointed and wanted to share my concerns with anyone who may be considering a purchase.

It took me AN HOUR even with the unit next to a window to find a spot where I did not experience from moderate to severe radio interference severe meaning that it completely lost the channel the WR-120 was set on. I tried different extension cords, no extension cords, etc.

Why? Was it due to a weak signal or poor antenna placement? No. I live five miles from the NOAA broadcast station and even closer to the National Weather Service's local office.

The problem is the effect that certain other devices plugged in to the same electrical outlet have on the unit's reception. Three seconds after plugging my laptop into the same outlet, the reception goes from CRYSTAL CLEAR to LOST!. Initially, I plugged the WR-120 in to the surge strip that powers my Mac and experienced an even more disturbing issue. Upon plugged the unit in the reception was fine, but upon silencing the unit with the weather/snooze button and then activating it again the unit had completely lost reception COMPLETELY!

While running the unit strictly on battery power with the exact same physical placement of both the unit and the antenna I experienced NONE of these issues. Running the unit off of batteries alone is not an option. As stated by the manufacturer:

"Batteries provide approximately 5 hours of emergency power or 75 hours of standby power for the radio in case of a power outage".

I have my WR120 installed in my office. Needless to say, all three available outlets have other items plugged in to them. If I had left my unit plugged in to the outlet I had used initially, I would have NEVER received ANY WARNING of an impending weather event as the item completely lost reception after the original setup. I'm pretty sure that NO RECEPTION = NO WARNING. I discovered this by accident. Given our recent history in this part of the country I'm very glad that I did.

My recommendation is this: Wherever you decide to plug in your unit, make certain to test it under all of the different electrical usage conditions of the outlet in question.

Additionally, one minor gripe for those considering mounting the item to a wall: This unit is designed with the input for the AC cord on the top (or back for those laying the unit flat). This means that if you mount the WR-120 to a wall the cord obtrusively juts up into the air out of the top of the unit and then loops back down to the ground. It looks bad. This could have very easily been remedied. The manufacturer should have moved this input onto the left side of the unit (opposite the on/off switch) and provided an AC adapter with an 'L' shaped prong rather than the 'sticks-straight-up-in-the-air' prong that results in the obtrusive two inch piece of black cord jutting out the top.

On the positive side, when the unit finds a good outlet it seems to function well. It's easy to use and set up. It's a nice looking piece of equipment. Unfortunately, my only option is to mount mine to a wall with it's appearance marred by the poor cord placement.

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This radio is awesome. Yea it's loud but it's a weather radio it is supposed to be loud, I haven't seen one that is not, and I've had a few. Well, it is very easy to set up just follow the instructions they are very clear. I had a problem with reception, and after calling Midland they advised that I move the radio around the house that helped some but I had a metal roof that caused interference. I bought their antenna for $21.00, and once again it was easy to install, that solved my problem. If you live in area that is known for tornados, flooding or any emergencies this it's worth it.

ADDENDUM:

It has been a couple of months since I bought this radio, you must have an antenna if you live in areas that are low or surrounded by mountains. This radio warned us 30 minutes before the news of pending problems, like flash floods, or tornados. It was really helpful during Hurricane Irene.

Ilive Clock Radio for Iphone/ Ipod

Ilive Clock Radio for Iphone/ Ipod
  • Compatible With All iPod & iPhone Models With A 30-Pin Dock Connector
  • Plays & Charges Docked iPod & iPhone
  • Lcd Display

I am really sorry I bought this clock radio. It is too bright for me to use (but my son likes the night-light effect.) However, after about a week of using it, our whole family noticed a high pitched squeal coming from the 5 volt power supply. Unfortunately the store from which I purchased it didn't have any more to exchange it for me. I emailed iLive, but I didn't hear back from them. So I called them, and because I didn't have a receipt, they weren't willing to mail me a replacement power cord. They said I could BUY a new one for $17. Give me a break!

I also have a different clock radio from them, and it is also too bright to use as well, plus the controls are extremely confusing. I would avoid iLive altogether.

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The product worked great. It was super easy to set up and use. The sound was good for a clock radio. Unfortunately, when I turned off my lights at night, it looked like I had a street lamp in my room. There was no way to dim it, and I ended up covering it with a towel to sleep. It will be going back. Can't sleep when I'm blinded!

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I purchased this clock/radio/dock for my new phone. It worked initially (sound), but as I'm mostly using it as a phone dock, I didn't try the sound aspect again for about another week. The next time I tried turning it on (radio, iPhone) there was nothing. No sound. I played with it a bit changing between radio stations/iPhone, etc. and at some point it kicked in and seemed to work. I had no idea what, if anything, I had done to make it work. Didn't try again for a few days. That time it didn't work again. Messed with it a bit with no luck. A few weeks later same thing. I just will not make any sound. Alarm won't make noise either. Basically the only thing it does is tell time and charge my iPhone. Called support and they tried to "troubleshoot" which included unplugging it for 30 seconds. Hadn't saved the receipt so after DPI told me they couldn't help me without a receipt, luckily the store I purchased it from was able to look up the receipt for me from a month earlier and I will be sending it back for a replacement. Don't even really want this model again but it's better than being out $35. Hopefully the replacement will at least work. Definitely would not recommend this unit. It even feels like a cheap piece of plastic. If I could have given it zero stars I would have.

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This is a good size for a night stand and works fine. Charges the phone and the time is easy to read, with several different light settings that are easy to adjust.

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Does not have gradual wake function as indicated by product.

The manufacturer claimed if I want the volume to be gradual, I must change it manually after I wake up!

Sony ICFC705 AM/FM Clock Radio SILVER

Sony ICFC705 AM/FM Clock Radio SILVER
  • Free Shipping

This radio was out of production, but seemed to fit the bill for what I needed. I paid $50, actually more than the manufacturer's recommended price. I returned it. It is very chip and tinny sounding. Maybe it's worth $15 or $20 -not $40 or $50.

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I finally found a clock radio with 2 alarm setting and an ipod dock; and the best part is that it's easy to operate.