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  2. iRiver H10 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iriver_H10_series

    The player first went on sale in South Korea in December 2004 and rolled out internationally soon afterwards. [1] The H10 series are hard disk based players coming in a 20 gigabyte form, along with smaller variants of 5 or 6 gigabytes. All versions come with a colour screen as well as voice recording and FM radio. [1]

  3. iRiver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRiver

    iRiver's U.S. unit, based in Vancouver, Washington, held 3.4% of the U.S. MP3 player market in 2005, according to IDC - down from a peak of 13%. [21] The company targeted early adopters among American users as it tried to regain dominance of the category. [ 22 ]

  4. Rio 500 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_500

    The Rio 500 was the first MP3 player to allow file transfer via USB cable, and PC & Mac support. It features 64 MB of flash memory available for music, has light blue backlight, ability to set bookmarks, has an expansion card slot (SmartMedia card) and is powered by one AA battery. It is roughly the size of a standard pack of playing cards.

  5. Play-Yan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play-Yan

    Play-Yan was released in China by iQue under the name of MP4 Player for GBA. It is an MP3 and MPEG-4 player add-on for the Game Boy Advance SP, Nintendo DS, DS Lite, and Game Boy Micro. Music and video files stored on an SD memory card can be loaded into a slot on the right side of the Play-Yan, which resembles a Game Boy Advance game cartridge.

  6. iAUDIO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IAUDIO

    In November 2009, the Cowon iAUDIO 9 was released, more than two years after its predecessor, the i7. iAudio 9 has a 43mm x 95mm x 8.6mm dimension, a weight of 40g, menu button and volume buttons on either side of the player, 8/16GB of memory, music and videos found on FM radio. [8]

  7. Samsung YEPP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_YEPP

    A bulky hard-drive based MP3 audio player which comes in 20G and 30G capacities. Its rated battery life is 25 hours of audio and 5 hours of video. One of the first video mp3 players made, it was released a few months before the iPod Video. The player has an FM Radio, text viewer, video viewer, USB host, and 5 default games.

  8. HuffPost Data

    projects.huffingtonpost.com

    Interactive maps, databases and real-time graphics from The Huffington Post

  9. Personal Jukebox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Jukebox

    The PJB was the first hard-disk-based MP3 player made available on the market. The "100" in the "PJB-100" name was chosen from the capacity of the original 4.86 GB hard drive in the first Personal Jukebox. With this drive, the unit was expected to hold about 100 popular (45 minute) music CDs encoded at 128 kbit/s.