The Interface

Just pressing the play/pause button once powers up the Mega Stick 1, and MSI's logo comes up immediately as a welcome message.



Once the Mega Stick is plugged into a host computer, the LCD immediately displays a ready status. File transfer initiates a writing status and a small music icon is animated continuously from the left to the right to indicate the direction of writing. Writing from Mega Stick 1 to the host computer still displays the writing status, but the small music icon is animated in the opposite direction.




The order of the music playlist is dependent on the file name, as Mega Stick's MP3/WMA playlist is sorted alphanumerically. The status of playing an MP3/WMA file is displayed, but only the play action is animated. The title displayed is drawn from the MP3's ID tag; if it is too long to see at once, the title will automatically loop right to left during playback.

There are several interesting things to note. For one, MSI has a few preset equalizer settings: normal, rock, jazz, classical, and pop. Additionally, the battery icon in the upper right hand corner is actually a meter, which shows the level of battery life left. However, because of its alright small size, it is hard to tell between the levels of battery life, though full, half, and empty can be clearly distinguished. This is also the case with volume.



The A and B icons seen between the volume and equalizer icons are for repeat playback. The user can specify the starting point and ending point in the playlist, and this will allow for continuous repeat within that segment.



The menu of the Mega Stick 1 also provides a few other options for playback: normal, repeat one, repeat all, shuffle, and shuffle repeat.



Once toggled, the lock switch prevents the rest of the buttons from their respective functions.



Out of the Shell… The Interface (continued)
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  • Aaapold - Tuesday, November 18, 2003 - link

    Outwardsound carries the Jens of Sweden, but it lists for $219.95.

  • geckojohn - Monday, November 17, 2003 - link

    So, has anyone tried out this MSI mp3 player?

    I'm really thinking about getting it... Do you know what Newegg's return policy is? Could i return it if it suckS?
    Thanks
  • Zoomer - Monday, November 17, 2003 - link

    It has been around so long, practically all the taiwan/china odm/oems have jumped onto it and produced tons of them.

    If it gets imported to America en masse, I wouldn't be suprised if the price falls to around $70. In fact, I just saw the Hyundai HY-208 MP3 Player + 128Mb Mini Usb Flash Drive for S$139 - that's about USD$77. I would imagine that it would be even cheaper in HK, S.Korea or Taiwan.

    The reason for such popularity? Well, if you are going to get a 128MB usb flash disk for $50, why not toss in another $20 to have it be able to act as a FM tuner/recorder/MP3 player?
    Besides, they are small, stylish, "in" (the current trend).

    This gets me thinking - how much profit would we be able to get if we get them and sell them on ebay? :)
  • geckojohn - Sunday, November 16, 2003 - link

    Hey, So what one would you recommend besides the Sweeden one?
  • OCedHrt - Saturday, November 15, 2003 - link

    http://www.wewa.com.hk/products.asp?mode=second&am...

    Here's some more.
  • FRiC - Friday, November 14, 2003 - link

    Not to mention, Acer has been selling this exact same MP3 player for a few months already, and for a lower price, before MSI released their version...
  • Andrew Ku - Thursday, November 13, 2003 - link

    Well, one more point I need to emphasize, and then back to the other reviews we got on the burner.

    The MSI Mega Stick 1 can't be seen just for its feature set, as size, weight, and price are just as important. If you compare it to the Nomad Muvo, there is a distinct differential in those three specific groups. This is also the case with iRiver.

    Ultraportable notebooks are the "all the rage" overseas, but are not necessarily in the same situation domestically. And in the context of motherboard makers diversifying their portfolio, we do see this to be the first type of product to market. We can eyeball the foreign markets all we want, but the American demographic (I am getting a bit political here... :p ) is very very different from the rest of the world. Not being able to be successful in the American/North American demographic has been a big roadblock to the success of many products.

    And to answer your hint of more MP3 player reviews: yes, we will have more down the road. The reason there are 4 and not more is because we took a hiatus from this section for a while. Our lack of reviews in that time is not an indication that we don't see the MP3 player market proliferating.
  • araczynski - Thursday, November 13, 2003 - link

    america is usually behind in technology, europe/japan always has the newest/smallest gadgets at least a year before america decides to copy them... i remember my brother brining home a cell phone from japan many years ago, while everyone was carryign those bricks around here, they had things a third of the size.

    america doesn't innovate as much as people think, america's good at copying and mass producing at lower prices, which is good too :)
  • boran - Thursday, November 13, 2003 - link

    ehm, may I point you to this site here:

    http://www.dansdata.com/usbmp3.htm

    it's just a "george" or "fred" with the buttons swapped around a bit, even the transfer speeds etc are the same, which makes me believe msi isnt really as innovative as the article is, since the review bout the george dates 11 feb 2003 and you cant claim different weight, specs for function, I believe they R 99% alike (besides logo, firmware and button arrangement)

    you can find around a million clones of the george or fred players on the market, imho my first misinformed review on anandtech cous if the reviewer just would have looked at the available players on the market for just a second he would have seen that there is nothing new or innovative at all with this MSI mp3 player.

    Boran
  • Oxonium - Thursday, November 13, 2003 - link

    I agree that Anandtech is extremely behind the times with this review. I just hope they make it up to us by having this be the first of many such reviews. Looking at the audio reviews menu, I see only four mp3 player reviews in 2.5 years. The mp3 player market is exploding and evolving as fast as SFF and it is barely being covered.

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