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  2. Gigabeat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigabeat

    Like the Gigabeat G, the player supports MP3, WMA (as well as protected WMA format), and WAV, but encrypts all uploaded files to a special SAT format. In November 2005, Toshiba released simultaneous upgrades to the Gigabeat F's firmware and the Gigabeat Room software. An English version was released in March 2006.

  3. Portable media player - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_media_player

    In the same year, Toshiba released the first Gigabeat. In 2003, Dell launched a line of portable digital music players called Dell DJ. They were discontinued by 2006. [49] The name MP4 player was a marketing term for inexpensive portable media players, usually from little-known or generic device manufacturers. [50]

  4. Toshiba Gigabeat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Toshiba_Gigabeat&redirect=no

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  5. List of hardware and software that supports FLAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hardware_and...

    On Windows Phone 7 (WP7) there is no FLAC support available in the default Zune media player [36] [37] though playback is supported in third-party applications like a Flac Player. [38] Similar goes for Windows Phone 8. Microsoft Windows 10 supports FLAC decoding in Windows Media Player and other software that uses Windows platform APIs for ...

  6. Zune - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zune

    The first-generation Zune device was created by Microsoft in close cooperation with Toshiba, which took the design of the Gigabeat S and redeveloped it under the name Toshiba 1089 as registered with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) starting in 2006. [13]

  7. RCA Lyra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RCA_Lyra

    The RCA Lyra X2400 is a portable audio/video recorder and player with a 3.5" LCD screen released around 2006. It has a CompactFlash slot, audio out, built-in speaker and RCA A/V inputs. [31] Recorded video is compressed with an XVID encoder. The included software, Blaze Media Encoder, can transcode from most popular video and audio formats.

  8. Creative Zen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_Zen

    It supports audio (WMA-DRM, WMA, MP3, WAV), video (WMV, Motion JPEG, MPEG 1/2/4, DivX 4/5, xvid) and picture (JPEG) playback. The ZEN Vision utilizes a 30 GB 1.8-inch Toshiba hard drive and can partition a part of its hard drive to work as a removable disk (up to 16 GB) for any operating system.

  9. Toshiba Satellite A series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toshiba_Satellite_A_series

    The magazine wrote that the A105 and A75 were particularly adept at home video capture and editing, [8] [9] while the A65 was rated particularly poorly. [10] [11] The last entry in the series, the A665, had submodels capable of stereoscopic graphics rendering with its special LCD that was compatible with the Nvidia 3D Vision active shutter ...