Yesterday, I was telling you about the difficulties in getting what should be a slick MP3 player/FM radio to work. Just as you shouldn’t count your chickens before they are hatched, you should not count on the Zune to work until it’s patched. If you have dial-up and buy a brand new Zune, expect an 8 hour download before you can even use the FM radio in it.
I’m sure everyone has wanted a radio that needs to phone home to Microsoft before it will even tune. But the features of the Zune don’t stop failing to live up to their potential there! Yes, there’s more Digital Restrictions Management - DRM (AKA less)!
Features:
8GB of flash storage - This is a significant space upgrade over my 128MB flash drive, 1GB iPod Shuffle, and even 4GB minivault hard drive. There’s just one BIG catch though. The Zune’s storage space can’t be used like those other storage and/or MP3 playing devices, as a portable hard drive. When you plug it into a computer, you have to hack the registry to even SEE the device’s storage space. And if you try to copy files off of the Zune, it tells you that Access is Denied!
Your purchased files, and free ones you created yourself, wind up encrypted and inaccessible on all but your own computer(s) (maximum 3). Really, the limitations and caveats put on the features of the Zune’s hardware, are mind boggling and complicated. Here is a summary on Engadget (which is getting out of date possibly, although more restrictions may have been added/lifted since then).
Because the Zune can’t be detected as an external hard drive in any computer (including Macs and Linux) the designers couldn’t include a copy of the huge 41MB install file required to make the device work initially. By comparison, I plugged in my iPod Shuffle, downloaded iShuffle.exe (288KB) from Packard on the Web, copied a hundred MP3 files to a Music folder on the Shuffle, ran iShuffle.exe, and seconds later had a working MP3 player. I can also take those MP3 (and other) files off the Shuffle and put them on any, and as many, computers as I want (including Macs and Linux boxes).
WiFi communication - Geeks drool at the thought of wirelessly transmitting their music collection around. You could share with friends who have Zunes, talk to your library on your home computer or Xbox, or wherever. Time to stop drooling. The WiFi in the Zune is crippled, and doesn’t even work as a simple web browser like the iPod Touch. If you do manage to find someone else with a Zune to share music wirelessly, the transferred songs only play for 3 days, can’t be copied to the other person’s home computer, and can not be transferred again to that person. That goes for music you played and recorded yourself! (This is what Industry Minister Jim Prentice was talking about when the “market decides” how to handle Digital Restrictions Management.)
USB connection - The USB connection on the Zune charges the battery, flashes the firmware, and transfers the music/videos/photos. Like the iPods, they have a flimsy slim connector, instead of a mini-B USB like many cameras and cell phones use. The iPod Shuffle 2G also suffers from the same sort of specialized USB cable requirement.
Video and picture viewing - Something that my screenless Shuffle can’t live up to, is the ability to display videos and photos. I was able to transfer .wmv videos that I made using Windows Movie Maker, and play them on the Zune. The Zune software found the folder with my videos, and offered to sync them, which was handy. What isn’t so handy is that I can’t put my videos and photos onto another computer using the Zune as storage media, because of the digital lock lockout. I use my Shuffle as extra camera memory on vacations. The Zune is pretty much useless to me in that capacity because it wont’ work with my Linux laptop where I can transfer files around.
Bottom line - The Zune’s feature list is very promising, but it fails to deliver where it counts for me. I need control over my files, I don’t want control of them taken away from me. I want my portable media player to also work as a portable storage system. I want to use it on both of my computers (XP/Ubuntu Linux, and Sugar Linux XO) and my friends’ Macs. I want WiFi to not have bogus caveats put on its use, and it should include a simple web browser or email reader. The FM radio should work out of the box (like, duh!). The packaging should be minimalist and not a giant middle finger to the environment.
Why am I being so picky about something that was free for me? Because it isn’t free for someone else, and people need to know that they should expect more from (what are essentially disposable) electronics. This is 2008, and we may not have the flying car as promised, but we can have a music player that:
- transmits songs back and forth wirelessly (Bluetooth or WiFi)
- interfaces with a vehicle wirelessly (Bluetooth or FM) and/or with a universal USB connector
- plays and records radio and also records via microphone (video and photos for bonus points)
- plays most common and free video and audio formats
- includes a web browser if it has WiFi built in
- has a user-replaceable rechargeable battery (solar recharge for bonus points)
- has games, and firmware hackability
- works with existing software on most computers available today, without requiring a download
It’s devices like the Zune that convince people that learning about digital media is difficult and a specialized field reserved for 12 year olds and computer geeks. It’s nothing of the sort if standards are worked out, and digital locks are thrown out of the design plans. Then your wildest technological dreams become possible, because you can do what you expect, instead of being told “Access is Denied”.
I’m going to give my Zune a bit of time to grow on me, but at this point I’m fairly confident that I should offer it up as a booby prize or to someone who is looking to hack it and make firmware for it that actually fixes the numerous problems and complications.



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![[EFC Blue Ribbon - Free Speech Online]](http://www.efc.ca/images/efcfreet.gif)
Stephen Glauser | 12-Jul-08 at 3:26 pm | Permalink
At least your review was honest. Awesome. I picked up an iPhone yesterday, so will use that as my music player. Woot.
Had I not picked up the iPhone though, I simply would not have even considered the Zune. You’d have to do something special to make me not choose an iPod.
Johnathon Khadr | 12-Jul-08 at 3:45 pm | Permalink
Take a look at this picture of Omar Khadr.
[ADMIN: Rest of spam comment removed.]
Johnathon Khadr | 12-Jul-08 at 4:35 pm | Permalink
Take a look at this picture of Omar Khadr.
[ADMIN: removed]dustmybroom.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3617&Itemid=1
And Liberals want him returned to Canada?
How is this a spam?
Saskboy | 12-Jul-08 at 4:38 pm | Permalink
Johnathon, you’re off topic, your link was broken, you’re using a fake name and email address, it’s a disgusting (and hopefully faked) photo, and this is your last warning to not repost it on my blog.
If you have something relevant to say, you’re welcome to stay.
Johnathon Khadr | 12-Jul-08 at 4:49 pm | Permalink
[ADMIN: removed]www.rawa.org/handcut3.htm
Here is a better link for you.
After you see this and comment on it, I will not post about it again.
Saskboy | 12-Jul-08 at 4:55 pm | Permalink
Johnathon, it doesn’t say that that’s Omar. You think he would come up with that kind of torture on his own at age 12? Don’t bother answering.
huffb1 | 13-Jul-08 at 10:11 am | Permalink
Don’t you just hate it when people spam your blog Saskboy.
About your MP3 player. Where did you buy it?
Saskboy | 13-Jul-08 at 10:16 am | Permalink
Sure do Huffb1.
I won my Shuffle as a door prize, and the Zune was sent to me by a marketing company to try it out and to review and show it off. Unfortunately, I couldn’t honestly recommend it given the serious limitations on it - my screenless and less expensive Shuffle can simply do more of what I want it to do (just not video or FM). The lack of USB hard drive space in the Zune is a very serious drawback to me, along with the DRM crippling and OS limitation.
SC | 14-Jul-08 at 12:42 pm | Permalink
I just bought a 80 GB Zune player and overall I like it more then my 60 GB Ipod. Certainly, it is not as easy to reach the harddrive as the Ipod is but I mainly use my music players for music, videos and the occasional photo. The music is going to be the same on the two players but Ipod does come with Itunes which makes it easier to make custom playlist then the Zune but the Zune program easily beats Itunes for the simple fact it allows the user the ability to search for album information and album photos. The other smaller bonus is custom backgrounds are allowed on the Zune. I’ve had a couple of Ipods and the one constant record is that they easily damage be it small scratches on the screen or the headphone jack breaking relatively easy. The Zune has its downfalls mainly in the Zune program but it is far better then the Ipod for normal use.
Saskboy | 14-Jul-08 at 12:51 pm | Permalink
Let me know what kind of battery life you get SC. Thanks for the additional review tips.
marinegundoctor | 08-Aug-08 at 1:48 pm | Permalink
I just bought an 80 gig, too. At the same time I also bought a 5 pack of protective screen covers. I put one one first thing and it is as clear as the screen without. I paid just a few dollars for them at wally-world. I peeled the first one off and it left now residue, then I put another one on and left it.
Saskboy | 08-Aug-08 at 2:02 pm | Permalink
Thanks for the tip marinegundoctor.
rose | 10-Aug-08 at 5:55 pm | Permalink
so you have dial up too?
So do we and I am having major issues with the zune software its insane good thing it was free or I would have returned it and bought an ipod.
You can check out my rant post on it if you want LOL its mainly be b*tching about how hard they make it for people with dial up to get the software.
Maybe my negative attitude will change if I ever get to test out the player LOL cause right now its useless since the software has to be there or it can’t be used.
Saskboy | 11-Aug-08 at 11:51 am | Permalink
I don’t have dialup now Rose, but I have a lot of empathy for dialup users because it’s more common than hoity toity people think it is. Microsoft should really be ashamed of how they ship the Zune out in a non-working state. Good luck getting it going. Perhaps you can borrow someone else’s computer to update the Zune firmware and/or download the install file for you?
rose | 11-Aug-08 at 4:00 pm | Permalink
ya microsoft should realize not everyone lives in the city way to push people away from getting a zune. Cause the whole software issue is so not a great selling point, if this one wasn’t free I would have returned it after the first day of trying to get it to work and bought an ipod since our computer came with itunes loaded on it.
But I did get it to work finally. Left the internet turned on set up the software to load and left it all night and went to bed. When I got up I kind of expected to see the 99% thing again LOL but it worked after all. At least getting my music on it and everything was easy. I like the player itself now that I have music and everything its just the whole hassle of getting the software set up that ticked me off LOL
Saskboy | 11-Aug-08 at 4:30 pm | Permalink
Yeah, but the device won’t let you get your music back off of it, or any other files like it should be able to do easily. For me, that really spoils its other features (when you do eventually get them to work).