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The SD card acts as a separate storage volume with reduced features relative to the internal storage volume. SD card content does not appear under the regular menus Music, Artists, Albums, etc., appearing only on a separate "Memory Card" menu item which offers a folder-file browser.
A 32 GB model was announced on December 4, 2007, setting a record for storage capacity among flash-based players. The player is 0.44-inch thick, [ 35 ] making it the slimmest ZEN player so far. It is the first ZEN to have an SD card slot, support for unprotected iTunes -encoded AAC , and a 24-bit color screen.
Samsung SPH-M2100, the first mobile phone with built-in MP3 player was produced in South Korea in August 1999. [57] [58] Samsung SPH-M100 (UpRoar) launched in 2000 was the first mobile phone to have MP3 music capabilities [59] in the US market. The innovation spread rapidly across the globe and by 2005, more than half of all music sold in South ...
Zune music and devices were follow-on to Microsoft's MSN Music service. MSN Music was created in 2004 to compete with Apple's iTunes services and used the Microsoft PlaysForSure DRM protocol. After only two years, Microsoft announced the closing of MSN Music in 2006 [5] immediately before announcing the Zune service without PlaysForSure support ...
The Zune HD was released on September 15, 2009 to retail markets in black and platinum colors and 16 or 32 GB capacities; additionally, red-, green-, and blue-colored models were available through the online Zune Originals store. [10] Two months later, on November 6, 2009, firmware update 4.3 was released. [11]
The Sansa e100 series has a monochrome display with a blue backlight, FM tuner with 20 presets, SRS WOW technology, an SD card slot supporting cards up to 2 GB, an internal memory of 512 MB (e130) or 1 GB (e140), and a single AAA battery for power. It supports MP3, WMA and Audible file formats. The e140 was also known as the SDMX2.
The MPMan music player, manufactured by the South Korean company SaeHan Information Systems, debuted in Asia in March 1998, and was the first mass-produced portable solid state digital audio player. The internal flash memory could be expanded, but there was no support for external memory. It was delivered with a docking station.
The W series (Wearable) is a wearable music player built into a set of headphones. The original model, the NWZ-W202 was released in 2009 and had 2 GB of internal memory and could play 11 hours of music and can "quick-charge" for three minutes to yield up to 90 minutes of playback.