Archos 104 6GB MP3 and WMA Digital Music Player and Photo Viewer, Black (500863) | 
enlarge | Brand: Archos Category: CE
List Price: $189.99 Buy New: $89.99 You Save: $100.00 (53%)
New (3) Used (1) from $86.47
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 34848
Color: Black Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Fragile: No Batteries Included: Yes Shipping Weight (lbs): 3 Dimensions (in): 4 x 1 x 2
MPN: 500863 Model: 500863 UPC: 690590508637 EAN: 0690590508637 ASIN: B000HAVWMS
Release Date: September 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New Factory Sealed Pkg. No Tax. No Rebates. Free shipping upgrade. Order will be delivered priority in 3 business days. Singature is required for delivery
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| Features:
| • | Lightweight digital music player and photo viewer with easy-to-use, intuitive controls and a bright 1.5-inch OLED display screen | | • | 6 gigabyte hard disk provides you with up to 3,000 songs and up to 60,000 pictures of storage | | • | Compatible with MP3, WAV, WMA and protected WMA music files, and JPEG picture files | | • | Uses high-speed USB 2.0 for both file transfers and charging, and includes a rechargeable Lithium-Ion battery with up to 13 hours battery life | | • | Includes a line-out jack for playing your music through a stereo, weighs only 2.8 ounces, and measures approximately 1.7 x 3.6 x 0.5 inches (W x H x D) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The ARCHOS 104 is a miniature 6GB MP3 player features a 1.5'' color screen and JPEG3 photo viewer. The ARCHOS 104 can store up to 3, 000 songs or 60, 000 photos in the palm of your hand.The ARCHOS 104 6GB expands on ARCHOS' successful line of miniature hard-drive MP3 players with advanced features and functionalities.
Amazon.com Product Description With the Archos 500863 104 6GB MP3 and WMA Digital Music Player and Photo Viewer (Black), you can take your best music and pictures with you wherever you go. The perfect companion for everything from long trips to short bus rides, from going to parties to just hanging out around the house, the Archos 104 lets you not only take your favorite moments with you, but helps you make new favorite moments wherever you happen to be. Of course, the main purpose of the Archos 104 is to play music. Because it has a real hard disk inside of it with six gigabytes of memory, you can store up to 3,000 songs in WMA format at 64kbps, or up to 1,500 songs in higher quality MP3 format at 128kbps. This unit comes able to play not just MP3 and WMA files, but protected WMA files, and even uncompressed WAV files at full CD quality. You can even play iTunes on your Archos 104 by downloading the proper update from the Archos website, and as new audio formats are created, future updates will also be made available on the manufacturer's website so your Archos will continue to support the newest and best audio formats. Using a standard audio cable, you can also play your music through a home entertainment system, allowing you to bring your entire CD collection with you anywhere, and play it over anyone's sound system. Putting music on your Archos 104 is as easy as dragging and dropping any of your unprotected music files. For protected, purchased music from PlaysForSure web sites, it's as easy as clicking the Sync button in Windows Media Player. With its USB 2.0 high speed port, transfers are finished before you know it, and the internal battery gets recharged at the same time. The Archos 104 is also ID3 compatible, meaning that the ARCLibrary will sort your music so that you can listen to it by artist, album, title, year, or genre, or just click on shuffle and listen to your music at random. The ID3 tagging also allows you to view the CD jacket cover for any of your music while you are listening to it. With your Archos 104 you can also store and view up to 60,000 photos in JPEG2 or VGA format on the built-in, 1.5-inch OLED color display screen. The use of OLED (organic liquid-crystal display) technology with its smaller carbon-based molecules, creates a screen that is brighter, thinner, lighter, and faster than normal LCD displays, providing you with not only a smaller player, but a screen that is more easily viewed in bright lighting conditions, and at greater angles. All you need to do is transfer pictures from your computer to your Archos 104, and you'll be able to easily look at them in high quality, wherever you are. Finally, you can always use the Archos 104 as a portable hard drive to carry important files with you. You can even use the Archos' intuitive double-browser to easily organize, rename, create, copy, move, and delete files and folders, as well as creating your own playlists from the music you already have stored. You can also autosync with Windows Media Player 10 to quickly and easily transfer your songs and your playlists from your PC. The Archos 104 has a built-in line-out jack as well as its stereo analog earphone output. This unit is not only has a USB 2.0 port, but is backwards compatible with USB 1.1 as well, and can be used with either a PC or a Mac. The built-in rechargeable Lithium-Ion battery provides you with up to 13 hours of music playback or picture viewing, and is not only recharged via the USB 2.0 connection, but can be charged via an optional power charger as well. Firmware updates can be downloaded from www.archos.com so your Archos is always up to date and running at its best. This unit comes in a match-everything black color, and is eminently portable, weighing only 2.8 ounces, and measuring approximately 1.7 x 3.6 x 0.5 inches (W x H x D). What's in the Box Archos 104 digital music player, 1 x USB 2.0 cable, 1 x pair of stereo headphones, a quick-start guide (with a full user's manual preloaded on the 104's hard drive, and available for download as a PDF to your PC), and a neck strap.
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| Customer Reviews:
Great fidelity, moderate volumn. December 4, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I initially purchased the Apple iPod Nano, but was not happy with the sound quality, even after trying various EQ settings. I returned that unit and purchased this Archos 104 because I sound checked it in a store and recalled that it had outstanding sound quality, definitely better then the iPod Nano.
The other advantage of the Archos is that it has two modes of interfacing, in one mode, it is tightly integrated with the Windows PC software, much like the Apple iPod must use iTunes - I never used this mode. The other mode is that the Archos can be configured to interface with the computer as if it were a standard flash memory drive. This permits the Archos to be used on any operating system that supports USB flash memory drives, i.e. Windows, MacOS, Linux, etc. This mode also frees the user from having to use a specific application, such as iTunes, to manage the music library, since in the flash drive mode, music is simply copied as any other file copy operation.
Once the music is copied over (in flash drive mode) the software inside the Archos will scan the ID3 tags of the newly added music and update it's internal database, organizing by Album, Artist, Track, Genre, etc. There is also a file browse mode that enables the user to ignore this organization and just navigate the files and directories directly.
The only issue I have with this unit is that the volume is simply too low. At least with the iPod Nano and another mp3 player I tried (TresStore), I was able to drown out the horrible music at my gym; unfortunately, the Archos is unable to deliver the volume needed to do this.
I would recommend this unit for high fidelity listening in an environment with little or no background noise.
Slow Hard Drive Access and Ackward User Interface July 21, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
After having my Archos 104 for about one month, I am pretty happy with my purchase, but there are some small details that occasionally annoy me. I purchased the player because it works with protected WMA files, which I get from Yahoo! Music Unlimited To Go. Loading my music is not a problem at all and I have been very pleased. I've also used the new Windows Media Player 11 (comes with Windows Vista) to sync podcasts that I download. The player also has great battery life. I have a long commute to and from work, and the battery has lasted from when I turn it on at 6:00am to when arrive back home around 7:00pm (with the player being off for 1-2 hours while I'm in meetings, etc.).
Now for the annoying parts. First of all, on shuffle mode, if you want to skip to the next song, there's a long 2-3 second gap, which compared to my girlfriend's iPod, is a long time.
Also, the user interface can be a little counterintuitive at first, and it's way more complicated than it should be to switch from shuffle to a playlist.
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