iRiver launches H10 Junior, T20, and T30 players
Well, well, it sure did take 'em long enough, but iRiver officially debuted the H10 Junior, their 512MB and 1GB flash players that emulate the look and feel of their older sibling. But wait, there's more: iRiver also launched the T20 and T30 devices (pictured above, respectively), both coming in 256MB, 512MB, and 1GB sizes with MP3, WMA, ASF, OGG, and USB 2.0 support in addition to the rest of the standard fixins.






















yhwetwety: thanks for adding so much to the discussion.
The H10 junior is really tiny. I wonder how the touch pad works at that size.
Still pissed that the H10 series offer less functionality than my 120.
Holy cripes! Is that price right for the 512 and 1 gig model?
That's outrageous! Makes Apple look cheap!
But your paying the extra money for better sound quality.
CNET did a random blindfolded tests for sound quality of the latest hard drive based MP3 players. Guess who came in last everytime: Apple iPod.
When are they going to update their Zen Xtra line with smaller hard drives of at LEAST 30GB? Those Xtras are getting old. Who wants another 512k player anyway? Do you think I want to bother picking which songs I want to hear before I go out? These suckers cannot hold 1/25 of my 25-30GB collection @ 256kbps.
Paul/ What price? -_-
Kiaora,...this price http://www.pcworld.com/resource/article/0,aid,121487,pg,1,RSS,RSS,00.asp
iRiver is definatly the company to watch out for in the portable DMP segment right now. Their line of flash based players comes with much more granularity in feature sets than any of the competitors. I.E. you can get into their IFP line with a b&w screen, fm tuner, and a gig of memory for about 20 dollars less than the ipod shuffle which doesn't come with the screen or the tuner. And as you toss a few more bucks into the mix they consistantly add features all the way up their product line.
Other value added features are available across their product lineup, like seinheiser earbud headphones, and flash upgradeable firmware that adds newer codecs so as to continue to provide a wide base of support for media now and in the future...