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New Sony WALKMAN's. check them out! |
doohan Joined: Dec 27, 2002 Posts: 163 From: Sydney, Australia PM |
Finally!! It's here - the much rumored Sony's new Network Walkman devices is due this 4th quarter ~ November 19, 2005. In addition, the "CONNECT Player" is reported to be ready sometime in December 2005 or earlier.
Berlin, 8 September 2005 - 26 years after WALKMAN created a revolutionary music lifestyle, the new Sony WALKMAN will now redefine it.
Simply called ‘WALKMAN’, the new digital music player from Sony features spectacular ergonomic design and an exciting range of intelligent features that allow the user to enjoy music in a totally new way.
Sony WALKMAN is a true extension of the user’s personal taste and musical preferences. At the press of a button, the ‘Artist Link’ function will search every artist, album and song stored on the device and offer suggestions of artists and bands closely linked to the genre of music being played at the time.
Sony WALKMAN, available in two capacity sizes - 20GB (NW-A3000) and 6GB (NW-A1000), also features two new shuffle functions. By selecting ‘My Favorite Shuffle’, the device automatically selects the most listened to 100 songs and plays them at random. The ‘Time Machine Shuffle’ function randomly selects a year and plays all of the songs from that particular year that are currently held on the device.
Featuring an advanced organic EL display (2 inches on the 20GB version and 1.5 inches on the 6GB model), Sony WALKMAN not only incorporates a range of great features, it also offers the ultimate in ease of use through an appealing user interface and fantastic visibility.
Once switched on, a mobile phone style ‘Home’ menu appears offering nine different options that can be selected via the four-way directional button. These include ‘Music Library’, ‘Play Mode’, ‘Initial Search’, ‘Intelligent Shuffle’, ‘Favorite 100’, ‘Play History’, ‘Settings’, ‘Playlist’ and ‘Now Playing’.
Music can be searched in a variety of ways, via ‘Genre’, ‘Artist’, ‘Album’, ‘Song’, ‘Release Date’, ‘Rating’ and ‘Recently Transferred’, all of which can be scrolled through to enable users to find their music faster and easier. Sony WALKMAN records three years of playback history that can be searched and also features the first ever ‘Initial Search’ on a hard disc device, allowing the user to scroll from A-Z for ultimate ease of use.
“We are raising the bar with the new Sony WALKMAN”, said Gregory Kukolj, General Manager at Sony Europe. “This stunning new device will be instantly appealing to both style followers and technology-minded individuals alike. One drawn by the spectacular design and the other by the outstanding ease of use and features that really deliver. The new Sony WALKMAN is an irresistible proposition for users who want the ultimate digital music
player.”
The 20GB Sony WALKMAN is available in two stylish colourways, violet and silver; while the 6GB unit comes in the additional colours of pink and blue. All devices package with colour-matched headphones.
The NEW WALKMAN will be simultaneously introduced with a whole range of design-matching accessories such as a stylish remote control for easier navigation, various carrying cases, a docking station for convenient connection with the PC as well as a docking speaker system giving the option to both connect to a PC as well as playing music through the speakers.
“CONNECT Player” incorporates a new and improved user interface that features a simple ‘drag and drop’ function for easy transfer from library to player. “CONNECT Player” supports the new functions within Sony WALKMAN as well as providing automatic software updates and increased Codec support.
NW-A1000, 6GB - ¥30,000 (USD$272) *available colors: Violet, Silver, Blue and Pink; Limited Edition Color - Black, NW-A1000/B and Gold, NW-A1000/N @ ¥28,000
NW-A3000/1000 Series | Features & Specifications
- New (2" for NW-A3000 and 1.5" for NW-A1000) gorgeous OLED display
- Automatic Japanese syllabary conversion
- features "Artist link"
- new "Intelligent shuffle" feature
- 6 EQ mode: Heavy/Pop/Jazz/Unique/Custom 1/Custom 2
- utilize new "CONNECT Player" software
- support MP3 ~ 32-320 kbps, ATRAC3 ~ 66/105/132 kbps and ATRAC3plus ~ 48/64/96/128/160/192/256/320 kbps. *WMA support will be enabled via a firmware update this December 2005.
- Hi-Speed USB 2.0
- Color matching stylish headphone
- Power supply: Lithium ion chargeable battery
- utilize either USB charge/AC adaptor charge.
- Equipped with G protection
- Size: 65.2 × 104.2 × 21.4mm (depth, height, width)
- Mass: approx. 182g
NW-A3000/1000 Series | Accessories
- "CONNECT Player" (CD-ROM)
- headphone (40cm in length)
- headphone extension cords (65cm in length)
- USB cable
- Quick Start Guide
- AC adaptor and AC cords
Watch the Presentation... click the link below!
http://www.jp.sonystyle.com/Walkman/Special/Nova/Swf/nova.html
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[ This Message was edited by: doohan on 2005-09-08 17:38 ] |
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JT Joined: May 13, 2005 Posts: 303 From: Birmingham PM, WWW
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Hasnt this just been posted in another thread. Anyway yeah I like them, seem pretty well thought out |
doohan Joined: Dec 27, 2002 Posts: 163 From: Sydney, Australia PM |
Some more info....
Sony's new CEO fights discord at rival units
Wednesday, June 29, 2005
By Phred Dvorak, The Wall Street Journal
A year ago, Howard Stringer watched helplessly while Sony Corp. fumbled the launch of its online music business.
As head of Sony's U.S. operations, Mr. Stringer had championed a plan for a service, dubbed Connect, to compete with Apple Computer Inc.'s popular iTunes store. But he ran into a problem that was all too common at the electronics giant: Different groups within Sony handled different parts of the service, and they didn't work well together.
The software to organize the downloaded music was made by the Tokyo-based personal-computer group, but it didn't always work smoothly with the new versions of Walkman music players created by the Japanese portable-audio team. That team, in turn, was out of touch with the teens and Web-surfers who buy music online in the U.S. By the time Mr. Stringer's Tokyo bosses stepped in to fix the problem, Connect had flopped after its launch in May 2004.
"It took a crisis" for Tokyo to respond, recalls Mr. Stringer.
Now, Mr. Stringer has another chance to get it right. Last week, Sony shareholders officially placed the 63-year-old former TV news producer as Sony's top executive, after a remarkable March management shake-up that saw previous Chief Executive Nobuyuki Idei and President Kunitake Ando offer to step down.
Mr. Stringer, the first foreign CEO to lead Sony, has the daunting task of installing order and direction in a company plagued by confusion and poor leadership. He will be fighting 50 years of history: Sony has long thrived on a hyper-competitive culture, where engineers were encouraged to outdo each other, not work together. Some employees still boast they don't follow orders with which they don't agree. That approach created one monster hit after another, from the Walkman to the PlayStation videogame machine, turning Sony into one of the most successful global brands of the past few decades.
But recently, as the company ballooned in size and the number of competitors increased, the infighting has led to costly mistakes. Rival electronics divisions within Sony pumped out competing products with little guidance from above. Sony's units -- from televisions to insurance -- bucked strategy imposed by their corporate bosses.
The malaise is clearest in Sony's electronics division, which accounts for 70 percent of the company's revenue. Last year, it reported an operating loss for the second straight year as competition pummeled prices for key products, such as TV sets and Walkmans. Sony's reputation as an innovator is also suffering as the snazziest gadgets from competitors, like the iPod or the TiVo digital video recorder, increasingly depend on the specific juggling act that Sony can't do well: integrating hardware, software and services.
Mr. Stringer has said he will announce his turnaround plan in late September, and won't reveal any details before that. People familiar with Mr. Stringer's thinking say one tactic will be to streamline management and products, merging formerly separate groups so they are forced to talk to each other. "It's about ... the number of silos," said Mr. Stringer at a June 23 news conference, referring to Sony's highly autonomous business units. "It's impossible to communicate with everybody when you have that many silos."
An early indicator of whether Mr. Stringer can instill teamwork will be the Connect service and the revamped Walkman line that is crucial to its success. Both are scheduled for a relaunch before the end of the year. Although Sony has plenty of businesses that are bigger and sicker, few reflect the current sprawl and dysfunction of the group as well as Connect.
"All the complexities of Sony are compressed into" Connect, says Koichiro Tsujino, a Japanese engineer who last year was tapped to be co-president of the unit responsible for the online music operation and the music players that will link to it.
Connect was born in early 2003, when Mr. Stringer got a visit from Philip Wiser, then chief technology officer for Sony Music in the U.S. Mr. Wiser, 38, had helped found the pioneering online music service Liquid Audio in 1996. Now, he wanted to build a music-download service for Sony that could compete with Apple's iTunes online music store, which was about to start up.
Sony already had a long, bumbling history with online music. As early as 1998, when college students were starting to load music files onto their computers and exchange them over the Internet, Sony had considered bringing out digital-music devices and online services. But there were big differences of opinion: The PC and Walkman groups each had their own products and technologies they wanted to push. And Sony's U.S. music unit -- formed with the purchase of CBS Records in 1988 -- was afraid its sales would be hit by free music downloads. It wanted to hold off on everything until strict antipiracy measures were ready.
Mr. Idei, then president of Sony, helped broker a compromise, in which electronics would wait a year to put out its gadgets and incorporate the copy protection the music unit wanted. But nobody was completely satisfied, and privately, many electronics engineers complained the copy-protection measures were too strict. In the end, many parts of Sony came out with different devices and services at their own pace. Both the PC and Walkman groups put out rival music players, while Sony Music in Japan, Sony Music in the U.S. and Sony Electronics in the U.S. all had their own music portals or download services.
Mr. Wiser asked Mr. Stringer to let him put together something more coherent. "We can do this in nine months," Mr. Wiser recalls urging. "We've got the product, hardware, software."
Mr. Stringer agreed. He wanted to show that Sony could integrate its software, services and music players in an elegant way -- at a time when more and more people were praising Apple's simple-to-use iPod player and iTunes music-jukebox software, which organizes and plays digital music files.
But Messrs. Stringer and Wiser had authority over only the services part of Connect. Sony's PC software and music players were controlled by engineers in Tokyo. And Mr. Wiser started running into the same problems that had dogged Sony's previous online-music efforts: The company's diverse divisions didn't like working together.
Sony's electronics dons in Japan eventually agreed to help with the Connect project. But their priorities for gadgets didn't always match those of the Connect service. Some Tokyo engineers say privately that they remain wary of listening too closely to Sony's entertainment units -- whom they blame for obstructing new electronics products by worrying too much about piracy.
Mr. Stringer sent Sony executives emails and letters complaining that the company's jukebox software -- created by programmers in the Japanese PC division -- was clunky and hard to use, say people familiar with Connect. But nothing happened. A Sony spokesman in Tokyo says the division didn't have time to make changes given Connect's tight deadline.
On the gadget side, U.S. marketers pushed for a version of the Walkman that stored music on a little hard disk, like the wildly successful iPod, as well as Walkmans capable of playing music files encoded in the MP3 format, the de facto standard in the U.S.
The Walkman division was run by an old-school Japanese engineer named Takashi Fukushima. He was known as a perfectionist who pushed his engineers to reduce the number of screws in gadgets.
Instead of a hard disk, Mr. Fukushima initially opted to have the Connect-linked Walkmans use a high-capacity version of the MiniDisc, which stores music on a removable cartridge and is popular in Japan but never took off in the U.S., say people close to the Walkman division. When Mr. Fukushima's team finally made a hard-drive Walkman, he said in an interview that hard-drive gadgets "aren't interesting" because "anyone can make them."
Mr. Fukushima also didn't make the new Walkman play MP3 files, sticking instead with a proprietary technology called Atrac that was developed for the MiniDisc. Mr. Fukushima declined to comment for this article.
Even within the electronics division, various arms worked at cross-purposes. Both the Walkman and PC groups launched their own hard-drive music players within a month of each other -- without coordinating on product-planning or marketing. At the time, some executives said such duplication was part of Sony's tradition of healthy internal rivalry.
Mr. Wiser was philosophical about the difficulties in coaxing the various units to change their products for Connect. "We took a bunch of things that were already there and glued them together," he says. If Sony had tried to get everything perfect from the start "we never would have gotten it done."
But outside Sony, the view on Connect and the "iPod-killer" Walkman wasn't so sanguine. Reviewers panned them for everything from their reliance on Atrac to their clunky interfaces.
Messrs. Stringer and Wiser took the opportunity to push for improvements across the board. Mr. Stringer emailed a negative review from The Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg to top Sony executives in Tokyo, say people familiar with Connect. To his surprise, Mr. Stringer found that the executives hadn't realized things were so bad, these people said.
Faced with a public-relations disaster, Messrs. Idei and Ando took action. In November, they set up a separate company, which was also called Connect, and got a veteran Japanese engineer to help run it. Their choice was Mr. Tsujino, 47, a polished English-speaker who had overseen Sony's successful DVD recorder line.
Mr. Tsujino had worked all over the Sony empire -- in PCs and TVs, both in Japan and the U.S. He knew Mr. Wiser. And until recently, he had been working with both the software and services groups on Sony's version of the TiVo. That was just the kind of cross-company cooperation called for in Connect.
Mr. Tsujino agreed to help with Connect. But he had one condition: He needed control of both software and hardware to make it succeed, people close to Connect say. Mr. Idei promised to move all the necessary divisions into the Connect company, and appointed Messrs. Tsujino and Wiser as co-presidents.
With their new authority, Messrs. Tsujino and Wiser started reorganizing the business. They asked a Sony software team in San Jose, California, to revamp the music-jukebox software previously handled in Tokyo. Mr. Tsujino began directing a redo of Sony's hard-drive Walkmans, which had been brought into the Connect company.
Then Mr. Tsujino heard some troubling news: A Walkman team that made flash-memory players -- tiny devices that store music on memory chips -- wouldn't be coming to the Connect company as promised. Instead, it would be moved, along with Mr. Fukushima, to another division. Sony insiders speculate that Mr. Fukushima was reluctant to part with the team. Sony declined to comment on the maneuvering.
Mr. Tsujino went to Mr. Idei to demand an explanation, say people familiar with the events. He found that Mr. Idei hadn't known about the move, the people say. The transfer of the flash-memory players out of Connect's orbit went through in February. Sony declined to make Mr. Idei available for an interview.
In March, Mr. Idei said he would step down and hand over the reins to Mr. Stringer, amid a worse-than-expected slump in electronics earnings. Contributing to that slump, Sony executives say, was the poor performance of the Walkman line, whose CD and MiniDisc players were seeing their share eroded by the iPod.
Some of the organizational disarray is now receding, Sony insiders say. In mid-April, Connect finally managed to win control of the flash-memory Walkman group. The PC group quietly stopped production of its rival hard-disk portable audio device in May.
Sony's new flash-memory Walkmans, fashioned to look like little perfume flasks, have been top sellers in Japan -- beating Apple's equivalent iPod -- since they were launched in April. Its latest line of hard-drive Walkmans is starting to take share from hard-disk iPods in Japan as well, according to sales-tracking service BCN Inc.
People close to Connect say Sony is pushing hard to roll out a fully revamped version of the Connect service, complete with jukebox software, a retooled Walkman and a video-download service in the fall. Connect is also working with the videogame and cellphone groups, in a stab at true cross-company cooperation.
Some people close to Connect say cross-Pacific communication is still tough, and tensions inside the company remain high -- particularly between the Japanese hardware engineers and the U.S. music and software teams.
"Sony's gotten so big that things don't connect any more," says Yukio Hata, an executive at Sony Music Japan who oversees a Japanese music-download service allied with Connect. "They've got to get connected again. That's the mission of Connect."
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doohan Joined: Dec 27, 2002 Posts: 163 From: Sydney, Australia PM |
Quote:
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On 2005-09-08 18:39:14, JT wrote:
Hasnt this just been posted in another thread. Anyway yeah I like them, seem pretty well thought out
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Oops... hope not, the only thread i found was with the new iTunes phone - ROKR + iTunes 5 + iPod nano...
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S4k1s Joined: Mar 09, 2005 Posts: > 500 From: Sweden PM |
looks really nice
but I think I like the ipod nano more
it's getting hard now to pick a new mp3 player  |
david1975 Joined: Apr 05, 2004 Posts: > 500 PM |
looking nice |
jeko.uk Joined: Dec 31, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: south east london PM |
looks good
i would probably get it if i never had a W800i
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max99 Joined: Nov 24, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: Manchester (@ Uni) PM |
i fink it luks ugly
and luks tacky like plastic
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[ This Message was edited by: max99 on 2005-09-08 18:29 ] |
BlackBauer24 Joined: Aug 28, 2003 Posts: > 500 From: UK, USA, JA PM |
Looks abit fat next to the ipod mini
LET GO ... AND LET GOD |
Rav250 Joined: Sep 25, 2002 Posts: 174 From: UK PM |
lol that was a bit on the eye to read all that. The device look good, but i still want W800  |
batesie Joined: Feb 13, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: London, UK PM |
A thread was started 20 minutes before this one HERE
[addsig] |
victorh017 Joined: Jul 24, 2005 Posts: 379 From: Caracas, Venezuela PM |
I Actually like them
And remember, this units for sure will have better sound, and exchangeable battery, which is always a great advantage over the ipods.
 CMDJ5 > T230 > T610 > K700i > K750i > K810i > K850i > G900 RED > C905 Gold |
tranquil Joined: Dec 15, 2001 Posts: > 500 From: Oslo, Norway PM |
Let's continue in the topic started first.
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