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The Samsung YP-R0 (also known as Samsung R0 worldwide or Yepp R0 in Korea or Samsung R'PLAY in France) is a portable media player made by Samsung, leaked on August 10, 2009 [3] and first released end of October 2009 in Russia. [4]
The Yepp brand was first introduced at CES 1999 in Las Vegas where the first Samsung mp3 players have been unveiled (YP-E, YP-B and YP-D series). Samsung MP3 players were branded "Yepp" worldwide until 2003. From then Samsung only kept this brand for the Korean market while the players sold in the rest of the world were simply branded "Samsung".
YEPP: First released: 2008: Predecessor: ... (or simply Samsung S3) is an MP3 player produced and manufactured by Samsung ... MP3 Files in the Samsung S3 are managed ...
In 1999, Samsung launched the YEPP series aiming to deliver some of the smallest MP3 players on the market. These devices went beyond mere MP3 playback functionality with built-in FM tuners and ...
A Samsung Yepp U series collection. From left to right: YP-U1, YP-U2R, YP-U3, YP-U4, YP-U5, YP-U6 and YP-U7. The Samsung Yepp U series is a line of USB key MP3 players made by Samsung and introduced in 2005 with the YP-U1. Samsung used to release a new device every year. Only the YP-U7 was released two years after the U6.
Samsung claims up to 25 hours of music playback (with MP3 128 kbit/s files, volume level 15, normal sound mode and display off) and 5 hours of video playback (SVI, brightness 3, volume level 15, normal sound mode). The R1 features an icon and widget based TouchWiz user interface developed in landscape mode. However it is possible to rotate the ...
The Samsung T10 is a flash memory based Yepp portable media player (model name YP-T10) produced and developed by Samsung Electronics. [1] As the newest player of the T series, the T10 abandons using the controls of the T9, but adapts the K3's. The Samsung T10 is bluetooth compatible allowing it to connect to a bluetooth headset.
In popular usage, MP3 often refers to files of sound or music recordings stored in the MP3 file format (.mp3) on consumer electronic devices. Originally defined in 1991 as the third audio format of the MPEG-1 standard, it was retained and further extended—defining additional bit rates and support for more audio channels —as the third audio ...