The other day I wanted find out for how much Ogg Vorbis-capable portable audio players go on ebay. I noticed an auction for an iPod nano clone player (Chipod) that the Hong Kong-based seller claimed to play Ogg Vorbis among some other formats (like MP4/MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 video) and to store up to 4 GB of audio and video files. When I stumbled upon the auction it was at 7 € or so with 3 minutes left. I thought what the hell and bidded and won with 12.03 €.
It took 2 1/2 weeks to get here, a bit longer than the seller claimed (5-10 days). It was packaged in a little-bigger-than-palm sized box and the tax form thingy stated the value was 8 Hong Kong Dollars, which are about 0.65 €. It came with a Mini USB adapter cable, a 220V DC to USB adapter, a CD-R with Windows 98 drivers and AMV encoding software. It also came with a generic manual in broken English that clearly wasn't written for any specific model. Luckily, these things aren't that difficult to handle.
The box also held ear phones that look pretty identical to generic iPod ones. I didn't put them in my ears but gave them to my little brother and used my Creative EP-630.
It was preconfigured to use German menus, which I set to English - the German translation was OK but not the best. It actually plays Ogg Vorbis perfectly, at least the ones in my collection which are encoded with the AoTuV-patched vorbis libraries (mostly beta 5 and 5.5) at quality 6 (~192 Kbit/s). It also plays unprotected WMA, MP1, MP2 and MP3 files.
It doesn't come as a surprise that it doesn't actually play any other video format other than AMV. There's a ffmpeg fork out there to encode AMV but the quality isn't the best, even with the software scaler compiled in. Quality-wise, what seems to work best for me is to do the rescaling and framerate/sample rate/sound channel conversion using mencoder to a lossless format, then transcode to AMV with the shipped software.
It can also display JPEG, GIF and BMP image files and the ebook reader lets you open TXT files.
The Z80-based processor is a bit on the weak side, the menus don't feel as snappy as I'd like them to be. Sound quality wise it would be OK if there wasn't a faint but audible interference when there's screen activity. Apropos screen, it's a bright 1.8" big 160x128 screen that looks pretty good.
There's a little bit of a nostalgic feeling involved, since the original Z80 also powered the first home gaming console I ever used, the SEGA Master System.
However, it didn't take long for me to notice that this isn't a true 4 GB player. While it was partitioned to show a 4 GB FAT partition and there was also a sticker reading "4 GB" on the back, it's really a "hacked" 2 GB player. Putting more than 2 GB of files on the hacked partition caused the files after the 2 GB mark to be unplayable. Following a guide from
mympxplayer.org fixed this and the player now operates correctly showing its true size.
This player doesn't maintain any kind of collection database, and it doesn't read Ogg tags. Luckily, Amarok can arrange files and folders in such a way that I can practically mimic said functions somewhat.
The battery life is around 6 hours for playing Vorbis with EQ enabled and some occasional file browsing.
Well, for 12 € it's practically a steal anyways so I'm still considering it a pretty good deal despite the smaller storage size. Let's see for how long it'll live to serve me as my portable Vorbis player.
Edit: I gave the seller a neutral feedback, mentioning the hacked memory and including the URL to a website examining the so-called scam. Shortly afterwards, I received a request per mail to remove the feedback. I responded that I might remove it when I learn of his opinion. He then offered me a 5 Euro refund. I accepted, got my refund and removed the feedback. So in the end, the player did cost me only 7.03 Euros.